@@mrmike8490 i have no idea why you would say that. Concrete is the most ubiquitous building material used ever. There are concrete structures built by the Roman's still in use today. Concrete has been used for thousands of years. It's continuing use testifies to its great usefulness.
@@wholegrain27 This is why i said that. 🙄 The production of 1 m³ of concrete requires 2,775 MJ of energy. This energy comes mostly from oil burning, which generates CO2. 2.775 MJ of energy is produced by 0.37 barrels of oil. Saving concrete, e.g. by adopting appropriate building solutions, means therefore not only reducing fossil fuels consumption, but also pollutant emissions.
I live on a hippy commune in Canada. I tore down the wood and styrofoam dome that was painted over here. It had fallen in and rotted a long time ago. There were many domes that were built near here in the 60's and 70's. The only one that survived was a concrete dome. No one lives in it now though. It is tricky to fit products from a square world into a curved home. You need to make custom furniture and think differently about many things. Domes are natural. Beavers, birds, bees and surely other creatures live in dome shaped dwellings. You get the most interior space for the least exterior walls and roofs. There are no corners that make for poor air/heat/cooling flow. Domes are the strongest possible shape. I went with a hexagon for my home. for me it was a nice in between of the dome that these cool dudes are working on and the traditional square home. I like it. It works for me. I was able to reuse other peoples old windows, doors, couches, beds, etc. I built it with 2x6's from my own woodlot... There is no one way to go. I can't wait to see how this home turns out. Thanks for sharing!
Great project! I been seeing a lot of Air-crete projects like patios or small retaining walls but this is the first I've seen of an actual structure. Very nice! I wish you all well.
Eskimos were not the first.... yet maybe the first with "air-ice" ... or snow as some might way. Air-crete appears to be the advantage with this setup. Cool, either way!
Using flexable sticks to make an arch then using others to form a hemisphere / dome and skin it with animal skins, mud or broad leaves was done by lots of 'peoples' everywhere from the Asian steps, to the jungles of the Amazon to Africa lands. It's racist to say that only the Eskimo people built domes.
@@shawnwright5332 why the duck are you commenting to me when an earlier poster used the term and I just used it so there would be no confusion. Why didn't you comment to him? Duck off, I've worked in north Alaska and THEY'VE INTRODUCED THEMSELVES TO ME AS Eskimos you PC fool. May you get the education of a lifetime you richly deserve from Percussion University.
Sodium laurel sulphate is a reducing agent for the soap to be a liquid, if you are using apoch fleece you should consider using drivit then cover it in a silicone roof coating, long life uv stable.
@@AEON. - There's a dome company called "AI Domes" in Florida that has a dome home that has been at ground zero of all the major Florida hurricanes, and the only damage that has happened to any of them as a whole, is a single 6" crack in one when a DOUBLE WIDE HORSE TRAILER blew into it during the hurricane! All the islands in the path of hurricanes like PR should mandate that ALL HOMES have to be DOME HOMES. They simple are near indestructible in the wind since there's nothing for the wind to grab... Smart Floridians could also adopt them more on the coasts, and save throusands on hurricane insurance... They're also cheaper than traditional construction, and that's not even using Air Crete, but AI Domes own method of building them with panels...
@@AEON. The Earth Ship Home (which are cool for using water 3 times!) roofs are flat, since they catch rain water with no well water... (off grid). But yeah, air crete would be a competitor to adobe...
B Miller I was just asking this question. Thank you. I live near Panama City, near the eye of Hurricane Michael. Matter of fact, my parents rode it out in a rehab center that was right on the eye wall (dad had just been in a terrible car wreck). It was terrible. They were ok but my mom had to drive my dad an hour home bc the center was hit so hard All this with a broken neck to a house with no electricity for a month and no access to doctors or meds. It was awful. All that to say, I’m looking for something to offer more safety for people in general.
People , I’m a 43 year old General Superintendent for a commercial Drywall and Painting company in the upper Midwest of the US, MInnesota, Wisconsin , Iowa, Dakotas , and occasionally Chicago. I have been in this discipline (steel framing and finishes ) since I was 18. Upon reflection , I can’t ever remember any project that as laid back and transmitted so much good energy as this one does. VIA VIDEO MIGHT I ADD. I can’t put my finger on it. But I want it. Perhaps it’s just the scale or the fact it’s a workshop and not a contacted build.
Built sectional mold and assemble on site and pour it full of air-crete and have a house in a day. Then move to the next location and pour another one. Laziness leads to efficiency.
@@mrmike8490 They actually have that already. I watched a program on Terra-forming Mars. They had a large 3D printer that could build using this type of material. It was pretty cool. All automated and could be controlled my remote. They need to put that machine to work building homeless shelters.
@@hollywoodgold8076 The problem of homelessness is not lack of housing. or even lack of affordable housing. its more an issue of mental health and substance abuse that needs to be addressed first. A Sane and Sober person who hits hard times and ends up homeless rarely stays homeless more than a few months.
Now that there has been a year from this video, and hope the dome has been completed and functional, I was wondering if you are going or planning to make an update on how has the whole experience been and has the construction fulfilled your expectations, I was thinking in the sense that being from a warm climate myself, have also met with some other problems that regular concrete has, and "air-crete" being a concrete and water foam base aerated material, has moisture absorbing and structural weak properties.
Air-crete is permeable.. Yes you seal it or it will take on water. If you live where it freezes, if any water gets into your structure, first freeze your building will crumble to dust.
you can sealed it by spraying already cured walls with "liquid glass" ( sodium silicate or potassium silicate ) that will also react with the concrete ,speed up the curing and improve the structural strein 10 times .
I wonder if you can build this on a deck since it is lightweigt, not necessarily wood. In the oil industry, they often put buildings up on a steel I-beam foundation that is supported by pilings. The reason I ask is that in northern Alberta, we could easily have three feet of snow piling up around the house. Having it off the ground (with skirting all around for insulation) would be interesting.
Trevor Stolz , ask at www.domegaia.com. They teach the workshops and basically are evangelizing this technology. I am sure they would be helpful. I do not know. My guess is the snow would probably insulate the house like an igloo. ... I am just the filmmaker.😉
I wonder how well this will hold up in Kansas to our tornadoes. Typical stick built homes and out buildings don’t fare well when hit directly by a tornado. Would really like to see a dome structure built here approximately 400 to 500 square feet.
I love this idea! I've developed a dome brick molding system. While not as efficient as standard brick molding, the bricks are molded to the curvature of the dome. I believe this would add to the structural stability and ease of construction. I would love any interested people, to assist me in this project.
Jeff, where are you? I would be interested in your project. I have worked on many eco building projects and have developed an easy to install, cost effective and efficent sewage desposal system, which you could incorprate in your build. I am going abroard on Sat 3rd July. If you contact me before then I may be able to help you.
@@peterhouston161 I am nowhere near completing this project.The molds would have to be 3D printed...and given their size..in pieces. Once created, however, they can be cast and easily recast in aluminum. I am in Las Vegas,
I can tell you that that the fiber coating on the outside is going to be VERY strong. I'd bet it would (easily) pass the 90 Mph 2x4 missile hazard test (like hurricane proof windows in Miami have to go through). Basically they shoot an 8 foot pine stud 2x4 at your window going 90 Mph. It can crack, but it MUST stop the 2x4 from going through it. AND, if I am wrong, you could always add an inexpensive wrap of medium gauge chicken wire below the fiber wrap coating, and that would do it for sure. NICE - Very nice design. I love it. I'd live in one of those in a heartbeat. And yes, someone mentioned Puerto Rico - they could really use this technology right about now.
I love the idea. Another way of construction that is more material but very sturdy and more insulation is to lay the blocks flat instead of on and edge. Then inches across to form the dome. Then plaster or stucco outside and inside to finish. A raised wood floor to carry plumbing and electric..
Hi! A lot of good questions and seems like interviewer just asked them impromptu, well done! I think this is the best building material of all! I hope maybe some day to make a very simple dome and be off the power grid. Be careful about breathing concrete dust. The second guy in the interview coughed, only once, but I just thought about concrete dust and wanted to mention it here.
I am the filmmaker. I did just stop by and ask questions. It was not a planned event. The video was made to support testimony on what is possible for affordable housing. It is amazing that the world has watched it, when it was simply made for a public hearing.
I think they can probably make few fiberglass mold with this project when its completed. A slice or two in the vertical section. This will help expedite completion in the future. Just my thought.
I think in Hawaii I am done with wood frames or even foam bricks and prefer pvc Pumkin type frame covered with shade cloth and stuccoed with foam crete. mahalo
Very interesting, I am glad to see young people pushing the boundaries of what conventional construction is. I am curious as to how well aircrete handles water infiltration in a situation such as a berm home. That may simply be an incorrect application of the material, but I am unsure. Any thoughts?
speedbuggy Yes, any berm home will need to mitigate water infiltration. My concern might be the strength to hold the overburden. Domes are strong but dirt is heavy. ???
Concrete is never a good water retainer, if you want it to be then something else needs to go on top. As for the strength, arches and domes only get stronger under compression.
@@Toefoo100 You probably could, but it would somewhat difficult to craft these ring forms because they would be curved on two dimensions. Each ring would have it's own specifications which would be hard to travel with and/or craft all these different size rings
Think igloo. They get huge winds there and don't move. Being spherical the wind has nothing to grip onto and just slides over it. Yurts also can stand violent winds being round and no overhanging roof. They are made of sticks and felt or skins. Our obsession with square vertical walls with overhanging roofs don't stand a chance without some serious engineering
Great video - very informative. I'm just curious how this technique holds up to snow and freezing temperatures. I'm sure you'd want to stucco and seal as much as possible, but would freezing temps cause the moisture in the air pockets to break apart? Also, could this be covered in earth for a "hobbit hole" design - would that help or hurt against freezing?
Question please!? I live in Irland, Will this material work in a region that constantly rains and is very humid, we only have sun two months a year!? Congratulations on the work!
I was wondering how it would do with rain as well. Also, why not build triangular molds and make it like a geodesic dome. You could also add the fabric to the mold to add strength. Maybe even some e glass fiberglass fabric. I do question how it would hold up to a strong hurricane. Probably should test it with a pressure washer to see how it will do for the rain and I would feel better with some steel as well.
Deus Vult there not heavy so it shouldn't be as bad as having a building collapse made from wood steel and bricks. perhaps it could be placed on huge springs at the base to absorb shocks.
Love it. This is a great design for gravitational and lateral forces but huge storms destroy structures by lift. It needs to be strapped down. Other than that, its a great introductory video.
Is aircrete a good insulator from cold? I live in Pennsylvania, we can get temps.as low as 0* F. In a very cold winter. Do you know the "R" value of your blocks ( this is an insulation value, the higher the number the better the insulating properites) awesome video!
if done correctly it averages about R-Value 2.2 per inch.. aidomes.com/aidomes-vs-aircrete/ ... suggest u check out hempcrete, such a justbiofiber.ca/ blocks too...
Is the "roofing fabric" actually tar paper??? does anyone know? Wondering, because that doesn't seem like it would be porous enough, and something like fibrglass, or nylon mesh would work better...
I want to take this class sooooo bad👀 Do you have to make blocks or could you also do the collapsible bubble/balloon form? I want one, On pylons, with a 360 patio. O ya. Drool worthy
Could these type of air-crete domes be built like half glass half air-crete? I love everything about these air-crete homes but for some reason I get claustrophobic looking at them with this little windows/light. Also, could air-crete domes be partly buried or would it develop mold or have other issues in time? And is it really breathable - hypoallergenic? I am having a really hard time finding something that is both breathable and natural and hypoalergenic and a material that can build a dome and be really strong. Also I haven't seen yet a video where they integrate water and sewage pipes and so on, stuff that a modern house would have, wouldn't that have to be planned and done before/during the ocnstruction?
would love to meet Gabe in mexico, also where was the first one done in Mexico. I am very interested in learning how to do this to assist a few friends in Mx. that my wife and I know in very poor districts in Gurerro, specifically Zihuatanejo
Probably not. The insulation factor is good and the dome could be water proofed, but if the pressure finds one weak block it could push it in and cause a collapse. I would only recommend solid concrete w/ reinforcement for underground use. You could maybe trowel on a layer of air-crete over the solid for insulation then water proof that?
This seems so simple, but it can be a struggle just to meet the legal code requirements. When I wanted to build a geodesic dome, the county wanted land density analysis, geothermal inspection, fees etc.. it's so much money just to develop the land it wasn't even worth it
I don't have knowledge about aircrete but its look like great and i think i am going to like the dome type of home. But my worry is.. what if it would be shaken by a quacke? I don't think so. I think i would fall because it has no still in it.
@@pablosteelio9462 Yucca and I'm surrounded by mountains. The wind comes down from the mountains and there's nothing stopping it. Only really hot days don't have winds until later in the afternoon.
Think igloo. They get huge winds there and don't move. Being spherical the wind has nothing to grip onto and just slides over it. Yurts also can stand violent winds being round and no overhanging roof. They are made of sticks and felt or skins. Our obsession with square vertical walls with overhanging roofs don't stand a chance without some serious engineering
Is anyone else thinking of destruction testing, 2x4x8' fired from an air cannon? Super interested in this construction method. Does anyone know if this material can be poured and released from forms like poured concrete? And what of reinforcement? Thanks.
Is this like an arch with a keystone so the more pressure on it makes it stronger? My head is spinning if it could be used underground they could build homes in the island's that get hit with hurricanes !😇
of course it could be used underground. dewater and dig out the footprint, build the dome below grade, and backfill once all the exterior reinforcement is done. though im not sure i would want aircrete holding up much soil pressure, as it is a rather brittle product. perhaps with some testing beforehand to prove stability of the constructed wall unit.
the younger generation are saving the planet. thank God for intelligence and persistence. God bless you and thank you for all you are doing.
I hate to piss in your cornflakes, but concrete is NOT environmentally friendly. I do really like the idea tho.
@@mrmike8490 i have no idea why you would say that.
Concrete is the most ubiquitous building material used ever. There are concrete structures built by the Roman's still in use today. Concrete has been used for thousands of years. It's continuing use testifies to its great usefulness.
@@wholegrain27 This is why i said that. 🙄
The production of 1 m³ of concrete requires 2,775 MJ of energy. This energy comes mostly from oil burning, which generates CO2. 2.775 MJ of energy is produced by 0.37 barrels of oil. Saving concrete, e.g. by adopting appropriate building solutions, means therefore not only reducing fossil fuels consumption, but also pollutant emissions.
I live on a hippy commune in Canada. I tore down the wood and styrofoam dome that was painted over here. It had fallen in and rotted a long time ago. There were many domes that were built near here in the 60's and 70's. The only one that survived was a concrete dome. No one lives in it now though.
It is tricky to fit products from a square world into a curved home. You need to make custom furniture and think differently about many things. Domes are natural. Beavers, birds, bees and surely other creatures live in dome shaped dwellings. You get the most interior space for the least exterior walls and roofs. There are no corners that make for poor air/heat/cooling flow. Domes are the strongest possible shape.
I went with a hexagon for my home. for me it was a nice in between of the dome that these cool dudes are working on and the traditional square home. I like it. It works for me. I was able to reuse other peoples old windows, doors, couches, beds, etc. I built it with 2x6's from my own woodlot...
There is no one way to go. I can't wait to see how this home turns out. Thanks for sharing!
Shad Oria wow that sounds awesome ! How did it go?
You can make fiberglass air crete mansion or yachts. They made concrete yachts then fiberglass,but there heavy.
@@davidsmith3736 you can use fiberglass mesh on the outside of the building to get the strength without as much weight
Fox News needs to hire this woman, no soft-ball questions! She kept me super interested in the process!
You could always listen to another station...
@@simonjenkins4481
CNN is fake news
@DrgnFlys
In my comment where did I say Fox news is legit? I can tell you right now. Most recently CNN has reported a lot of fake news
@@islandfantasy5931 why would you say they bring fake news? What's the reasoning behind that statement?
Hahahahahaha!
The person doing the interview has very good questions
SJ R Thank you!
Great project! I been seeing a lot of Air-crete projects like patios or small retaining walls but this is the first I've seen of an actual structure. Very nice! I wish you all well.
Air-crete weaker than concrete... so recycling used tires make more sense for a sustainable retaining wall...
Things to the eskimos for giving us the shape of these modern domes we never give credit where credit is due
Eskimos were not the first.... yet maybe the first with "air-ice" ... or snow as some might way. Air-crete appears to be the advantage with this setup.
Cool, either way!
What are you talking about... go away.
Using flexable sticks to make an arch then using others to form a hemisphere / dome and skin it with animal skins, mud or broad leaves was done by lots of 'peoples' everywhere from the Asian steps, to the jungles of the Amazon to Africa lands.
It's racist to say that only the Eskimo people built domes.
@@bobjoatmon1993 news flash Eskimo is a racist term it's Inuit people!
@@shawnwright5332 why the duck are you commenting to me when an earlier poster used the term and I just used it so there would be no confusion. Why didn't you comment to him?
Duck off, I've worked in north Alaska and THEY'VE INTRODUCED THEMSELVES TO ME AS Eskimos you PC fool.
May you get the education of a lifetime you richly deserve from Percussion University.
Sodium laurel sulphate is a reducing agent for the soap to be a liquid, if you are using apoch fleece you should consider using drivit then cover it in a silicone roof coating, long life uv stable.
Great piece thank you Felicia! Wish I had seen this and hope they come back!
Great ppl and great interviewer!
Puerto Rico would be an excellent place to hold a workshop. I hope that's in the works.
@@AEON. - There's a dome company called "AI Domes" in Florida that has a dome home that has been at ground zero of all the major Florida hurricanes, and the only damage that has happened to any of them as a whole, is a single 6" crack in one when a DOUBLE WIDE HORSE TRAILER blew into it during the hurricane!
All the islands in the path of hurricanes like PR should mandate that ALL HOMES have to be DOME HOMES. They simple are near indestructible in the wind since there's nothing for the wind to grab...
Smart Floridians could also adopt them more on the coasts, and save throusands on hurricane insurance... They're also cheaper than traditional construction, and that's not even using Air Crete, but AI Domes own method of building them with panels...
@@AEON. The Earth Ship Home (which are cool for using water 3 times!) roofs are flat, since they catch rain water with no well water... (off grid). But yeah, air crete would be a competitor to adobe...
B Miller I was just asking this question. Thank you. I live near Panama City, near the eye of Hurricane Michael. Matter of fact, my parents rode it out in a rehab center that was right on the eye wall (dad had just been in a terrible car wreck). It was terrible. They were ok but my mom had to drive my dad an hour home bc the center was hit so hard All this with a broken neck to a house with no electricity for a month and no access to doctors or meds. It was awful. All that to say, I’m looking for something to offer more safety for people in general.
They built one in PR i got to visit it
I'm hoping to build one in Puerto Rico in a couple of years. Looks amazing, strong and lower cost.
I am so facinatdm with this! I have watched all the videos many times. I wishI could build one here in the Virgin Islands! This is my dream!
Go take one of there workshops Judith
I Admired the two guys, specially the 21 year old, no laziness there. To doing this at that age is commendable
People , I’m a 43 year old General Superintendent for a commercial Drywall and Painting company in the upper Midwest of the US, MInnesota, Wisconsin , Iowa, Dakotas , and occasionally Chicago. I have been in this discipline (steel framing and finishes ) since I was 18. Upon reflection , I can’t ever remember any project that as laid back and transmitted so much good energy as this one does. VIA VIDEO MIGHT I ADD.
I can’t put my finger on it. But I want it. Perhaps it’s just the scale or the fact it’s a workshop and not a contacted build.
Leon Corriveau In your opinion, would you expect these would stand up to strong winds? Say, hurricane force? I am fascinated.
My biggest concern for Hurricane force winds would be about what heavy object could be thrown into it.
@@AkamaiBackyard Right,, but there again those flying objects would have a glancing off type of impact.
Built sectional mold and assemble on site and pour it full of air-crete and have a house in a day. Then move to the next location and pour another one. Laziness leads to efficiency.
In the age of the 3D printing it would be a great investment.
@@mrmike8490 They actually have that already. I watched a program on Terra-forming Mars. They had a large 3D printer that could build using this type of material. It was pretty cool. All automated and could be controlled my remote. They need to put that machine to work building homeless shelters.
@@hollywoodgold8076 The problem of homelessness is not lack of housing. or even lack of affordable housing. its more an issue of mental health and substance abuse that needs to be addressed first. A Sane and Sober person who hits hard times and ends up homeless rarely stays homeless more than a few months.
4:02 she whispers "let's go ... something"
They're on point. Definitely a professional video
This is a wonderful, concise explanation of the process, thank you.
so glad these have made it to Kauai !! I've seen them last year online !!! Yemaya
Now that there has been a year from this video, and hope the dome has been completed and functional, I was wondering if you are going or planning to make an update on how has the whole experience been and has the construction fulfilled your expectations, I was thinking in the sense that being from a warm climate myself, have also met with some other problems that regular concrete has, and "air-crete" being a concrete and water foam base aerated material, has moisture absorbing and structural weak properties.
DJFlores01 , just seeing this now. I will do a follow-up soon.
@@AkamaiBackyard any chance that followup is in the works?
@@AkamaiBackyard would love to see the update, is it online?
Very nice personality man
Air-crete is permeable.. Yes you seal it or it will take on water. If you live where it freezes, if any water gets into your structure, first freeze your building will crumble to dust.
Concrete is always permeable, same problems and solutions apply.
So, this material is fine for say... Hawaii ? or Mexico? or Philippines?
There are additives that make it water tight. Any cement brick wall is permeable.
Some sort of Styrofoam Exterior coating, though is would not be environmentally friendly would be a good candidate for waterproofing that structure.
you can sealed it by spraying already cured walls with "liquid glass" ( sodium silicate or potassium silicate ) that will also react with the concrete ,speed up the curing and improve the structural strein 10 times .
Great build ! Thank you for sharing this video with us!
Love this Rob and Felicia. Bummed I missed the workshop. Hopefully another time here on the mainland.
Brilliant well done you guys love it Larry in London x
love to see a update of the dome
Great vid guys , It has given me plenty of food for thought , Cheers Brent
I want to know more about how you build the foundation
From the description it sounds like a conventional poured concrete footing and slab but the slab is aircrete.
Awesome building, great inspiration !!!
I wonder if you can build this on a deck since it is lightweigt, not necessarily wood. In the oil industry, they often put buildings up on a steel I-beam foundation that is supported by pilings. The reason I ask is that in northern Alberta, we could easily have three feet of snow piling up around the house. Having it off the ground (with skirting all around for insulation) would be interesting.
Trevor Stolz , ask at www.domegaia.com. They teach the workshops and basically are evangelizing this technology. I am sure they would be helpful. I do not know. My guess is the snow would probably insulate the house like an igloo. ... I am just the filmmaker.😉
I wonder how well this will hold up in Kansas to our tornadoes. Typical stick built homes and out buildings don’t fare well when hit directly by a tornado. Would really like to see a dome structure built here approximately 400 to 500 square feet.
Would love to see a monolithic dome utilizing aircrete...
soooo coooool.... greetings from Canary Islands... wish you where here :-)
I love this idea! I've developed a dome brick molding system. While not as efficient as standard brick molding, the bricks are molded to the curvature of the dome. I believe this would add to the structural stability and ease of construction. I would love any interested people, to assist me in this project.
Jeff, where are you? I would be interested in your project. I have worked on many eco building projects and have developed an easy to install, cost effective and efficent sewage desposal system, which you could incorprate in your build.
I am going abroard on Sat 3rd July. If you contact me before then I may be able to help you.
@@peterhouston161 I am nowhere near completing this project.The molds would have to be 3D printed...and given their size..in pieces. Once created, however, they can be cast and easily recast in aluminum. I am in Las Vegas,
Excellent questions!
I can tell you that that the fiber coating on the outside is going to be VERY strong. I'd bet it would (easily) pass the 90 Mph 2x4 missile hazard test (like hurricane proof windows in Miami have to go through). Basically they shoot an 8 foot pine stud 2x4 at your window going 90 Mph. It can crack, but it MUST stop the 2x4 from going through it. AND, if I am wrong, you could always add an inexpensive wrap of medium gauge chicken wire below the fiber wrap coating, and that would do it for sure. NICE - Very nice design. I love it. I'd live in one of those in a heartbeat. And yes, someone mentioned Puerto Rico - they could really use this technology right about now.
Chicken wire might rust?
I love the idea. Another way of construction that is more material but very sturdy and more insulation is to lay the blocks flat instead of on and edge. Then inches across to form the dome. Then plaster or stucco outside and inside to finish. A raised wood floor to carry plumbing and electric..
Nice new idea. When is next time you will be in the Philippines?
Hi! A lot of good questions and seems like interviewer just asked them impromptu, well done! I think this is the best building material of all! I hope maybe some day to make a very simple dome and be off the power grid. Be careful about breathing concrete dust. The second guy in the interview coughed, only once, but I just thought about concrete dust and wanted to mention it here.
I am the filmmaker. I did just stop by and ask questions. It was not a planned event. The video was made to support testimony on what is possible for affordable housing. It is amazing that the world has watched it, when it was simply made for a public hearing.
@@AkamaiBackyard Hi Felicia! You have a gift and do not realize it! Thanks for creating this! A great cause for a greener world!!
por favor traduce el taller o dinos como hacer para obtenerlo
I think they can probably make few fiberglass mold with this project when its completed. A slice or two in the vertical section. This will help expedite completion in the future. Just my thought.
I think in Hawaii I am done with wood frames or even foam bricks and prefer pvc Pumkin type frame covered with shade cloth and stuccoed with foam crete. mahalo
Hi, Ralph. I am working on such a system.
I loved it! Thanks for sharing!
Con que ustedes hacen los bloques que flotan?
thx just wish u gave more details about mesh covering that was used...
Very interesting, I am glad to see young people pushing the boundaries of what conventional construction is. I am curious as to how well aircrete handles water infiltration in a situation such as a berm home. That may simply be an incorrect application of the material, but I am unsure. Any thoughts?
speedbuggy Yes, any berm home will need to mitigate water infiltration. My concern might be the strength to hold the overburden. Domes are strong but dirt is heavy. ???
Concrete is never a good water retainer, if you want it to be then something else needs to go on top.
As for the strength, arches and domes only get stronger under compression.
El domo in Italy used custom made modular bricks, you are a bro... but you are very hard worker.
Nice!
would it be easier to build a form and add debars and pout the aircrete?
why not build a dome structure form instead of bricks and fill it with aircrete
Looks like they can do small batches and bricks with less tools.
@Deimos Cain couldn't you just 36 inch ring sections, wait for it to cure then add more?
@@Toefoo100 You probably could, but it would somewhat difficult to craft these ring forms because they would be curved on two dimensions. Each ring would have it's own specifications which would be hard to travel with and/or craft all these different size rings
The way I've seen it done is they fill up a balloon then wire reinforce it and shotcrete it.
Building a dome form is pretty advanced construction compared to making a bunch of blocks. These are not contractors.
How about coming to Jamaica we really need affordable housing like that,how can we make the trip happen?
Any data on the compressive strength of the air-concrete?
About 1/10 of normal concrete Charles. Go thinshell as it uses less material than air-crete and is stronger.
dude's in shape!!
How much it cost in pesos, I'm from the Philippines, I hope it cheaper and sustainable in bad weather.. thanks
Can you please share your aircrete making method?
I mean the soap type, psi pressure. Etc
Photogenic Man Bun Convention
@mike brink Hello Mike....wow you're quite a smarty pants! I believe you....any more info on the idea?
What is the maximum diameter and size of this house? Using blocks
What would it cost me for him to do a workshop here in Tennessee. I am very intrested
What about earthquakes and hurricanes, Will they hold up?
How does it hold up against hurricanes.
Think igloo. They get huge winds there and don't move. Being spherical the wind has nothing to grip onto and just slides over it. Yurts also can stand violent winds being round and no overhanging roof. They are made of sticks and felt or skins. Our obsession with square vertical walls with overhanging roofs don't stand a chance without some serious engineering
Master builder 👍🏼 looking to do similar projects.
Great video - very informative. I'm just curious how this technique holds up to snow and freezing temperatures. I'm sure you'd want to stucco and seal as much as possible, but would freezing temps cause the moisture in the air pockets to break apart? Also, could this be covered in earth for a "hobbit hole" design - would that help or hurt against freezing?
Question please!? I live in Irland, Will this material work in a region that constantly rains and is very humid, we only have sun two months a year!? Congratulations on the work!
It should
What is the weight in pint of the mixed aircreat
I was wondering how it would do with rain as well. Also, why not build triangular molds and make it like a geodesic dome. You could also add the fabric to the mold to add strength. Maybe even some e glass fiberglass fabric. I do question how it would hold up to a strong hurricane. Probably should test it with a pressure washer to see how it will do for the rain and I would feel better with some steel as well.
I feel like high-fiving that tattoo
How much would charge to build 5 domes in Costa Rica,
How is the structure as it relates to earthquakes?
QUESTION~
The reinforcement fabric made by Apoc, would you put a layer on the inside of the structure as well or only the outside?
I am just the filmmaker, but I believe it was on the inside and the outside.
and how about basalt fabric?
no steel cable reinforcements? what worries me are strong earthquakes, those could easily collapse the structure.
Deus Vult there not heavy so it shouldn't be as bad as having a building collapse made from wood steel and bricks. perhaps it could be placed on huge springs at the base to absorb shocks.
Love it. This is a great design for gravitational and lateral forces but huge storms destroy structures by lift. It needs to be strapped down. Other than that, its a great introductory video.
Was this before or after the giant flooding they had there around that year?
Before. The flood of April 2018 did not devastate this area.
What about snow load for northern climates?
Does local regulations in Kauai allow these dome homes for actual legal residences?
No
Sorry what the formule for the bricks, congratuletions for the video!!!
Is aircrete a good insulator from cold? I live in Pennsylvania, we can get temps.as low as 0* F. In a very cold winter.
Do you know the "R" value of your blocks ( this is an insulation value, the higher the number the better the insulating properites) awesome video!
if done correctly it averages about R-Value 2.2 per inch.. aidomes.com/aidomes-vs-aircrete/ ... suggest u check out hempcrete, such a justbiofiber.ca/ blocks too...
Is it going to melt. Really? How is it with F 5?
Is the "roofing fabric" actually tar paper??? does anyone know? Wondering, because that doesn't seem like it would be porous enough, and something like fibrglass, or nylon mesh would work better...
Not tar paper, it's a woven type fiberglass kind of fabric, I have used non-woven weed mat from Lowe's and redguard to waterproof a shower
wanna do another workshop in Washington state?
I am in the Philippines now. I would really like to know where you did this. I will be waiting to hear from you .
I want to take this class sooooo bad👀
Do you have to make blocks or could you also do the collapsible bubble/balloon form?
I want one, On pylons, with a 360 patio.
O ya. Drool worthy
Is the structure hurricane proof?
What about mold -proof?
Could these type of air-crete domes be built like half glass half air-crete? I love everything about these air-crete homes but for some reason I get claustrophobic looking at them with this little windows/light. Also, could air-crete domes be partly buried or would it develop mold or have other issues in time? And is it really breathable - hypoallergenic? I am having a really hard time finding something that is both breathable and natural and hypoalergenic and a material that can build a dome and be really strong. Also I haven't seen yet a video where they integrate water and sewage pipes and so on, stuff that a modern house would have, wouldn't that have to be planned and done before/during the ocnstruction?
Where in the Philippines did you build another dome?
would love to meet Gabe in mexico, also where was the first one done in Mexico. I am very interested in learning how to do this to assist a few friends in Mx. that my wife and I know in very poor districts in Gurerro, specifically Zihuatanejo
Apoligise for my nievety but do you use normal bricking morter betweem air-bricks?
After the equator of the dome, does the angle or form of the air crete changes?
Make more how-to videos cool can you make a dome for underground house? How waterproof is the finished building?
I need a bunch of those for livestock houses.
can these aircrete homes be built underground?
Probably not. The insulation factor is good and the dome could be water proofed, but if the pressure finds one weak block it could push it in and cause a collapse. I would only recommend solid concrete w/ reinforcement for underground use. You could maybe trowel on a layer of air-crete over the solid for insulation then water proof that?
This seems so simple, but it can be a struggle just to meet the legal code requirements. When I wanted to build a geodesic dome, the county wanted land density analysis, geothermal inspection, fees etc.. it's so much money just to develop the land it wasn't even worth it
I don't have knowledge about aircrete but its look like great and i think i am going to like the dome type of home. But my worry is.. what if it would be shaken by a quacke? I don't think so. I think i would fall because it has no still in it.
How wind resistant are these buildings? The Arizona desert winds gust almost every day up to 60 mph.
cone shaped and circle objects would divert the wind around it.
60 mph winds almost every day? Where do you live? I live in the desert (near the Superstition Mt) in AZ and we never have much wind.
@@pablosteelio9462 Yucca and I'm surrounded by mountains. The wind comes down from the mountains and there's nothing stopping it. Only really hot days don't have winds until later in the afternoon.
what about waterproofing?
That skin they demonstrate that creates the strength is the waterproofing.
Gorgeous guys. Sigh. 😍🫶🏻🏳️🌈💪🏻
YES AIR CRETE FELLOWS PLEASE DO A VIDEO WHEN YOU GO TO THE PHILIPPINES 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍🌞😁🇺🇸
How would it stand up to a hurricane? The structure would withstand winds of what velocity? Does anyone know?
Think igloo. They get huge winds there and don't move. Being spherical the wind has nothing to grip onto and just slides over it. Yurts also can stand violent winds being round and no overhanging roof. They are made of sticks and felt or skins. Our obsession with square vertical walls with overhanging roofs don't stand a chance without some serious engineering
Thank you, that’s great to know!
How many bags of concrete does it take to make this dome and overhangs?
Zig says back in Rome we used blocks not sure what they were but they were heavy as fuk, maybe granite or marble?
Is anyone else thinking of destruction testing, 2x4x8' fired from an air cannon?
Super interested in this construction method.
Does anyone know if this material can be poured and released from forms like poured concrete?
And what of reinforcement?
Thanks.
Is this like an arch with a keystone so the more pressure on it makes it stronger?
My head is spinning if it could be used underground they could build homes in the island's
that get hit with hurricanes !😇
of course it could be used underground. dewater and dig out the footprint, build the dome below grade, and backfill once all the exterior reinforcement is done. though im not sure i would want aircrete holding up much soil pressure, as it is a rather brittle product. perhaps with some testing beforehand to prove stability of the constructed wall unit.