Concrete: A Ticking Time Bomb. Can We Fix It?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 апр 2024
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    Concrete - it seems like almost everything is built with it. But especially reinforced concrete has one dark secret, which we're taking a look at in this video, alongside multiple other problems. Is there a way to use concrete in better ways? Share this video with someone who cares for the planet! 🌍
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Комментарии • 544

  • @the_aesthetic_city
    @the_aesthetic_city  18 дней назад +17

    Head to squarespace.com/theaestheticcity to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code THEAESTHETICCITY

    • @Metal0sopher
      @Metal0sopher 17 дней назад

      Can't we make rebar out of plastic? Especially recycled plastic. It would solve two problems. It would not be as strong, but if made into tensioned nets it would have the same effect. I think it should be tested.

    • @petertrypsteen
      @petertrypsteen 12 дней назад

      Using cross-laminated timber is a terrible suggestion and should've included (synthetic) basalt as reinforcement material replacing steel.

  • @taz3810
    @taz3810 17 дней назад +247

    The real face of anti-Traditional architrcture: ugly, souless, short living, unefficient and enemy of the enviroment. Thank you for you videos, great as always

    • @gearandalthefirst7027
      @gearandalthefirst7027 14 дней назад +7

      Not sure if you noticed, but the proposed solutions were not entirely traditional either. Plenty of traditional architecture burned down, fell over, or otherwise was destroyed under it's own incompetency in far shorter than 50 years.

    • @taz3810
      @taz3810 12 дней назад +9

      @@gearandalthefirst7027 There's no match between traditional and modern. Where traditional was meant to endure it lasted centuries, where it wasn't meant to endure it was at least funcional and ecofriendly (like a wooden cabin house). The solution "not entirely traditional" still had to take the already existant knowledge as reference, while Modernism trashed it like it was just centuries of superstitions. Modernism was greatly moved by the hate for the old, rather than the improvement of things, thats the problem

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod 8 дней назад +4

      We used to build buildings that could last 1000 years but many of them were ripped down after only being used for 40 or 50 years. An example of that would be Penn Station in New York. It was designed to last 1000 years but only stood for 53 years and was ripped down in 1963. Thousands of similar long lasting buildings met a similar fate. Modernism arose from the idea form followed function. It is wasteful to put a ton of resources into a building that will only be used for 50 years. If a building is only going to be used for 50 years then why design it to last a thousand?

    • @diemes5463
      @diemes5463 4 дня назад +2

      Most buildings are built to whatever standard the owner can afford, the traditional buildings that last a thousand years are monuments that people have invested in to maintain. No ancient structures would exist if not for engineers and preservationists.

  • @gabetalks9275
    @gabetalks9275 17 дней назад +458

    It's amazing to me how mid-20th Century humanity collectively made all the wrong decisions possible. We traded sustainability, beauty, and urbanism that was once working wonders for everyone for greed, ugliness, and segregation. Even when the economic bubble is bursting and the planet is being rapidly destroyed for short-term profit, we still continue to destroy ourselves in name of greed and hatred for our fellow humans. It's sickening.

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  17 дней назад +41

      Happily there is an alternative - but it will be a battle to build better. We can only spread information, vote with our wallets, our feet and of course vote politically. But there is a lot we can do individually to spread the message!

    • @himanshusinghal242
      @himanshusinghal242 17 дней назад +22

      They were busy making easily scalable designs, with low demand on skills. Democractic governments rarely support any long term expensive solutions fearing backlash from industry (less profit) and people (expensive goods). We are also resposible for it. for example, Building norms are designed for 50 years as most people do not want to live in older houses, prefering new houses meant to accomodate latest tech.

    • @erwinfa35lightningii9
      @erwinfa35lightningii9 17 дней назад +6

      that`s post modernism for yay

    • @reinhardt3090
      @reinhardt3090 17 дней назад +5

      Segregation? What? I think you've got it backwards.

    • @TheRVSN
      @TheRVSN 17 дней назад +6

      @@the_aesthetic_city "vote with our wallets" -
      you will buy what they will tell you (deliver to "market").

  • @vadimsky
    @vadimsky 17 дней назад +121

    For architects and builders, start with: "Building with Lime: A practical introduction" or "Hot Mixed Lime and Traditional Mortars".

    • @MisterHeroman
      @MisterHeroman 3 дня назад +4

      Until we start running out of lime like we are doing to the beaches?

    • @vadimsky
      @vadimsky 2 дня назад +1

      @@MisterHeroman 1st of all: Lime-based concrete, hydraulic or non-hydraulic, is not a substitute for common concrete (PCC) used in construction today, which utilizes Portland cement as a binder. Lime constitutes 60-67% of raw materials consumed in Portland cement production. PCC is the second most consumed substance (right after water) in the world right now, as we speak.
      2nd: Quartz sand is mostly used for decorative lime plaster, which is the smallest part of lime-based construction materials and should be preferably coarse - so neither river, nor beach sand are optimal.
      3rd: Reinforced PCC should be, hopefully, replaced mostly by engineered wood in high-rise and infrastructure projects.
      4th: You should do basic research on cob, adobe, lime stabilized earth etc. - you'll love it❤

  • @philippschumann4556
    @philippschumann4556 17 дней назад +54

    Great video. As a German, a specific project in my country comes to mind that fits this just perfectly:
    The city of Stuttgart decided to put their big train station below ground, and so they are currently building a new underground train hall with huge, wide reinforced concrete structures. Just constructing this is taking 15 years, and guess what? The planned lifespan of this structure is... 80 years. What happens then? Nobody knows. Problems for future generations.

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  17 дней назад +13

      Incredible right? How public funds are squandered on buildings that might need to be torn down after one generation

    • @AndrewRoberts11
      @AndrewRoberts11 16 дней назад +9

      Many a trillion dollars has been spent in recent decades on High Speed rail tracks that are built atop viaducts constructed of reinforced, epoxy bonded, post tensioned, peer cast, unique concrete segments, that are hopefully good for 40-60 years. That unlike 19th century viaducts can't be repaired with a few bricks and sacks of cement, over a few weekends, in half a century. The stations are but the tip of an iceberg.

  • @thelordchancellor3454
    @thelordchancellor3454 17 дней назад +299

    The fact that modern building codes disallow the use of unreinforced concrete is really something

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  17 дней назад +72

      Many codes are designed in favor of the construction industry

    • @Metal0sopher
      @Metal0sopher 17 дней назад +25

      I never understood why foundations, especially low rise home foundations, have to sue reinforced concrete. I always thought that was weird.

    • @2mains234
      @2mains234 16 дней назад +37

      One of the problems is that all the regulations that govern the construction industry are passed into law by politicians who know nothing about construction. So they get experts to draft all the legislation for them. To gain expertise, such people need to have worked in the industry. Thusly we get biased rules which assume that the methods in use are the only ones possible. It is also useful for the industry to avoid change because that has a huge cost, not only in innovating designs but in retraining workers and changing supply chains.

    • @lupus7297
      @lupus7297 16 дней назад +29

      This is actually not completely true, within eurocode 2 which is used in Europe to design concrete structures there is a chapter about unreinforced concrete. However there are quite strict limitations to these as unreinforced concrete fails in a brittle fashion, giving occupants no time to get out of a building when it starts falling apart.

    • @TS-jm7jm
      @TS-jm7jm 15 дней назад +16

      ​@@2mains234 the real problem is not the type of regulation, but rather the OBSESSION that everything MUST have rules governing it enforced by the government. this is the real evil.

  • @ephix238
    @ephix238 17 дней назад +81

    I am studying civil engineering right now, and it is crazy how much of the lectures revolve around the use of reinforced concrete. I believe one of the main reasons for this is the fact that most people that want to construct buildings are wealthy people, and exactly those people do not think in a sustainable way, since this will not net them the most money. And i worry that since this is the case we will not really see huge changes in the near future. Tho brickwork is gaining a lot more popularity again especially for private contractors, and building with it makes it "only" 6-7% more expensive.

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  17 дней назад +14

      Yes there are many ways to design with other materials- they cost more, just like preventing rusting of the rebar, but we need to make a choice if we really want to be sustainable. Otherwise, we are just greenwashing or virtue signaling

    • @ephix238
      @ephix238 17 дней назад +1

      ​@@the_aesthetic_city This is very true, i really hope for more movement in that direction. And in this regard i deeply appreciate what you are doing.

    • @disposabull
      @disposabull 16 дней назад +1

      Have you discovered "passivhaus" standards yet? You should take a look at designing buildings that need almost zero heating or cooling.

    • @ephix238
      @ephix238 16 дней назад

      @@disposabull yes ! though not fully into detail yet, but it is being talked about since they do try to be sustainable in many ways.

    • @zteaxon7787
      @zteaxon7787 14 дней назад +2

      If reinforced concrete is used for the floors and the roof is properly maintained... Why would it last only 50 years or even just 100 years?
      I don't like concrete as a finished surface of buildings either. But the dufference is very important and not adressed.

  • @billyungen
    @billyungen 17 дней назад +131

    The more I learn about building codes, zoning, and planning in the 20th and 21st Centuries, the less I respect the academic and professional discipline of "Professional Urban Planning". Urban planners have given us everything from urban sprawl to hideous and unsustainable buildings -- and then they have blamed their failures on the petroleum industry or builders or whomever. On the East Coast of the United States, storm water runoff and resultant flooding is a huge problem in the oldest cities. Yet those same cities and adjacent suburbs continue to allow -- and even require -- massive amounts of impermeable paving and building that merely increases the runoff exponentially. I am exasperated with planning/zoning departments and their degreed/certified "urban planners". They are the problem, not the solution.

    • @hylje
      @hylje 17 дней назад +6

      Humanity would be better off without formal urban planning and architecture. The (human) cost of the occasional shoddy building is far lower than the cost of systemic failure.

    • @josephfisher426
      @josephfisher426 15 дней назад

      The profession developed mostly in response to those same problems. In the absence of planners, people would be paving even more in the suburbs because it's where the demand is. The biggest failing of planners IMO is catering to commuters with their road decisions. It was a rearguard action that was never going to pay off.

    • @billyungen
      @billyungen 15 дней назад +3

      ​@@josephfisher426 Response to those problems??? They gave the U.S. its worst problems. Urban planners devised the modern concept of dividing society into "residential, commercial, industrial". They bequeathed us a loathing of mixed use, and many (perhaps, MOST) municipalities in the United States STILL abhor mixed use in their zoning and planning. In suburbs from Washington, D.C. to Orange County, California, people have to get into their automobiles and drive miles to buy a litre of milk or a loaf of bread, or to buy a scone and a cup of coffee; that drive might be five minutes or it might be 45 minutes. It is no wonder that traffic is constantly terrible in Costa Mesa, Marietta, and Fairfax County. The demise of the neighborhood store or cafe was not merely a pity, it was an environmental catastrophe -- and still is. Only now are a few planning and zoning departments beginning to acknowledge it. But, in the mean time, planners and local governments have trained the populace to believe that the presence of any commercial entity in a residential zone is the end of property values there. Local residents will come shrieking with a whole host of "problems" (almost all of them perfectly solvable) at the first breath of anything commercial in their neighborhoods. It will be decades before any sort of mixed use is advocated as an antidote to the choking traffic of America's suburbs. American's have been socialised to believe in the segregation of "residential, commercial, industrial" -- a 1950's concept that was never even good in theory, and was a disaster in practice. Thank you, municipal planners. You sold us on the idea of suburbs, so now what?

    • @josephfisher426
      @josephfisher426 14 дней назад

      @@billyungen Mixed-use zoning has been a fad in planning circles since the mid 80s, which was itself only about a decade after there was any real planning. Before that most development restriction outside of cities, which did necessary things like banning the keeping of pigs, came from covenants. Covenants aren't really enforceable now, but when land was recently enough subdivided that original purchasers were still a large proportion of the owners, they were assumed to be enforceable.
      That mixed-use zoning that was a fad has mostly not worked. It was inspired by older urban areas and it would be nice if it worked. But it's less efficient for business, in an environment with cheap energy costs, to operate in multiple locations as opposed to centralized ones that people drive to. Business is what ultimately chose the current arrangement.

    • @billyungen
      @billyungen 14 дней назад

      @@josephfisher426 Mixed use "zoning" may be recent. "Zoning" is the operative word. But mixed use is thousands of years old. It has been around for thousands of years because it has great utility. Businesses and citizens today do what government planners allow them to do where government planners allow them to do it. They do not "choose" the current arrangement. Your post is poppycock. If businesses or citizens could chose where they do things, then we really WOULD NOT NEED planners.

  • @TheAnadromist
    @TheAnadromist 17 дней назад +34

    Modern architecture has been one of the greatest devil's bargains in history. Thanks for helping us to think about this. And you retain, not so much a sense of optimism but, resolve, that we must deal with this. I gave a lecture on texture that you might find interesting. Thanks. Let's find the ways out of this.

    • @joschkahurst
      @joschkahurst 2 дня назад

      Please don't cry this could be worst

  • @SisterSunny
    @SisterSunny 16 дней назад +12

    I can't believe it isn't common sense anymore to build buildings that won't degrade in a century. It's ridiculous, because in many European cities, the same people who build with this mindset are surrounded by buildings one and a half, two, sometimes even THREE centuries old. Thanks for the video

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  16 дней назад +2

      Absolutely! We need to start thinking far more long term

    • @pipeds9979
      @pipeds9979 8 дней назад +1

      please take note that reinforced concrete hasn't been in the industry for that long. The estimate 50 year life span has considered multiple safety factors. Technically, they can even live more than a century. Those non reinforced concrete you have mentioned will easily collapse after an earthquake and kill people instantly. Not to mention the limitations these kind of structure have (you'd need bigger walls, bigger columns, that reduces your indoor space, goodluck finding a big lot for that)

    • @user-yd4tm3gl8s
      @user-yd4tm3gl8s 2 дня назад +1

      We have cathedrals, old scyscrapers, that still stand after 5 centuries

    • @pipeds9979
      @pipeds9979 2 дня назад +1

      @@user-yd4tm3gl8s and how many of these cathedrals have also collapsed if they are not maintained or further reinforced?

  • @Mike-ym6rl
    @Mike-ym6rl 17 дней назад +14

    It’s remarkable that buildings are typically planned with a lifespan of just 50 years. I hold the view that this approach is deliberately encouraged and endorsed by the influential figures of our world. Instead of seeking approval, we should forge ahead toward more sustainable practices without waiting for anyone’s sanction.

    • @Bobrogers99
      @Bobrogers99 14 дней назад +5

      We have become a "throwaway society". Our municipal dumps are bursting full. Home appliances are not repaired - they're replaced. Automotive repairs are often replacement of entire modules. An expensive computer is discarded when one tiny soldered element fails. And so many buildings are torn down because they are "obsolete".

  • @LaMach420
    @LaMach420 17 дней назад +18

    "and so castles made of sand fall in the sea, eventually" 🎸🎶

  • @ba1anse
    @ba1anse 17 дней назад +51

    We live in consumeristic societies, nothing is built for the long term, not computers, clothes, not even buildings. Sad.

    • @user-gu9yq5sj7c
      @user-gu9yq5sj7c 16 дней назад +2

      planned obsolescence

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 16 дней назад +1

      Imagine the buildings in Babylonian civilizations...

    • @Monaleenian
      @Monaleenian 12 дней назад

      How long should a computer last? Would you be happy with a computer with the capabilities that were available in most computers 15 or 20 years ago? How about your phone? Same question. The products around us are as durable as we demand, given all the other factors that go into a purchasing decision.

    • @SeverinHawkland7855
      @SeverinHawkland7855 12 дней назад

      Everything is made for money, not to be used.

    • @ObsceneSuperMatt
      @ObsceneSuperMatt 10 дней назад

      @@Monaleenian You would only be dissatisfied, because you have experienced the newer machines. In reality, how much better off are we, really? A 480p video on DVD without all the compression looks better than a 1080p streamed video, because the compression that is used to save bandwidth. Games, especially "AAA" ones, spend all the money on polygons and textures and not on actually being polished and fun. How much more productive are they?
      I don't build a new computer every 5 years because I want new stuff, I do it because the requirements for everything have bloated. For phones, it is even worse; it only lasts as long as the battery, which is generally no longer replaceable. The apps don't need better resources, and if I want a good camera, I'm going to get something waterproof and protected, not use my phone.

  • @blerg
    @blerg 16 дней назад +26

    Architect here. About carbon capture technology(CCT) - the NORM here in Norway, after grilling the concrete industry-representatives(Betonmast): they capture the CO2 with a filter at the factory, and put the pressurized co2 in tanks. These tanks are then shipped by truck to the coast, where they they are loaded onto ships, which are then.... dug into the seabed. Literally putting their problems in the silt.

    • @mattllaves
      @mattllaves 13 дней назад +12

      So much energy and fuel being spent on transportation, pressurizing and even the capture, this makes absolutely no sense

    • @blerg
      @blerg 12 дней назад +4

      @@mattllaves They've just figured out how to play the Co2 regulations so it looks good on the spreadsheet. There's alot of awareness and regulations being discussed to avoid greenwashing like that fortunately. Notably, there's an anti-greenwashing pledge that most architecture and engineering companies are part of, where they use other measures in addition to Co2 to measure sustainability. In 2021 we(the government) also implemented a 50-year rule for all new buildings, meaning they must last 50 years without serious maintenance.
      Most architects and engineers worth their salt are also aware that designing buildings that can be adapted to future changes in use and needs, be easily maintained, not to mention simply being beautiful will make any building last much longer.

    • @accidentalchrist
      @accidentalchrist 5 дней назад

      This is the most stupid activity I have ever had even if it's about carbon credits and climate change bs, CO2 is less than 0.04% in the atmosphere

    • @steveperreira5850
      @steveperreira5850 День назад

      I wonder if they really do that, or they fake it?

  • @soldierblack5032
    @soldierblack5032 17 дней назад +15

    There's a lot of construction industries here in France which know how to built without concrete, since we still have building like that almost everywhere...
    Building methods aren't lost and the problem is not that they don't know but they don't want to change
    people aren't ready too to pay for a good and long time construction since it's much more expensive ..

    • @alexsmith-ob3lu
      @alexsmith-ob3lu 17 дней назад +2

      In France and Italy, many traditional forms of craftsmanship are still preserved but in America; these types of old crafts have been lost to history.

    • @marblox9300
      @marblox9300 День назад

      Um, don't leave large spaces in between your sentences - it's annoying.

  • @hofimastah
    @hofimastah 17 дней назад +11

    Another great episode.
    Also Roman concrete was a bit different and it has self repairing properties. Practical engineering channel has a great video about it 🙌🙌🙌

  • @mattesr.8680
    @mattesr.8680 7 дней назад +6

    I work for a company that produces rebar out of duroplastics. These glass fibre rods are used in Bridges instead of steel rebar. It is resistant to corrosion, so the bridges won't need to be rebuilt every few years

  • @kellymoses8566
    @kellymoses8566 14 дней назад +7

    rebar in concrete used in buildings isn't really susceptible to corrosion anymore than steel beams are. rebar corrosion is only really a issue for concrete exposed to weather.

  • @MrZkinandBonez
    @MrZkinandBonez 17 дней назад +28

    Great video. I already dislike the look of concrete buildings, but I had no idea they were so impractical as well.
    Love the visual presentation of your videos as well, and I'm glad to see you're comitting to your unique illustrated visual style. They're not just fun and stylised, but their simplicity also helps make the more complex explanations (such as how the rebars can get rusty) easier to comprehend.

  • @Chocolate-wb1bu
    @Chocolate-wb1bu 14 дней назад +9

    Another greatly underestimated material is just metal itself. There are plenty of metal alloys that are corrosion resistant so they last a very long time, and can be very beautiful as well, just look at historic cast iron facades. You'd keep the advantage of affordability too, since you can just press and stamp a large variety of beautiful shapes into metal plates, so there is no need for expensive artisans. Not to mention you don't need much of it since it's so strong, so less material has to be used and mined, and it's 100% recyclable as well so once it's produced it stays in circulation, plus you can process it with renewable energy. With proper interior insulation you don't have to worry about heat and sound either.

    • @accidentalchrist
      @accidentalchrist 5 дней назад

      I agree so much business interests lobby for policies to make cement and steel bars to be a standard

  • @Tindog81476
    @Tindog81476 17 дней назад +29

    Urg the trend that is bugging me right now is in my home city we have a bunch of really nice red brick-clad buildings, and for whatever reason everyone feels the need to paint all the wood, brick, insides, furniture everything blank white. I'm so sick of white, it's the concrete color of the 21st century. White is nice, too much of it though is just painful. No color, we can't have color anymore, everything must be white. Then in front of these houses, they take the lawns and make them artificial turf because covering our organic lawns... in plastic is a great way to save the planet, don't have real plants just imitate them with plastic.

    • @JakeHGuy
      @JakeHGuy 12 дней назад +1

      Oooof a lot of people in my neighborhood are doing that to their brick houses. Which is so weird to me because the brick never looked old.

    • @Tindog81476
      @Tindog81476 12 дней назад

      @@JakeHGuy Same... I know right, what's wrong with brick?

    • @newolde1
      @newolde1 9 дней назад

      Yeah what a gross trend. It's as though people want everything to be a homogenic giant mental institution.

  • @petertrypsteen
    @petertrypsteen 12 дней назад +5

    Partial solution for reinforced concrete: use synthetic basalt instead of steel or iron with or without coating(s).

  • @KoboraBC
    @KoboraBC 18 дней назад +31

    I love this channel

  • @HighFlyingOwlOfMinerva
    @HighFlyingOwlOfMinerva 17 дней назад +11

    Very well said! There is nothing worse than soul crushing concrete and your solutions sound pretty viable. Also, in Italy, even most of the "newer" buildings today are still built with arches, you can find them in the neighbourhoods built in the 1950s to 1980s in cities like Venice, Milan and so on.
    Now I wonder if the glass industry is causing similar problems for the environment, especially coupled with concrete...

  • @CMVBrielman
    @CMVBrielman 17 дней назад +14

    Also look into reinforcing concrete with graphene. The results are quite dramatic - stronger concrete that can reduce the amount needed by 2/3c IIRC.

  • @Khannea
    @Khannea 17 дней назад +17

    The building material of the future will be melted rock - by _sintering_ stone into a basalt like agglomerate we can create almost indestructible bricks in any shape imaginable. By assembling these bricks on site acording to computer aided design, you can erect extremely longlasting and absolutely beautiful structures by fitting these tgogether as Lego blocks - which allows deassembly and recycling blocks in the future. Variants of this asembly of hyperdurable rock components are 3D printing sintering desert sand thrugh a freznel lens - as wonderfully evidenced my Marcus Kayser.

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  17 дней назад +7

      Does this technology already exist?

    • @jennijenjenjen
      @jennijenjenjen 16 дней назад +1

      I believe this is the plan with constructing habitats on the Moon, and eventually Mars. By cooking the regolith we will be able to fly there with less materials, making it more cost efficient, among other benefits.

    • @kristofp72
      @kristofp72 16 дней назад +8

      Sounds like incredible amounts of energy needed to do this.

    • @septanine5936
      @septanine5936 12 дней назад +1

      but is it relatively cheap and easily scalable? cuz if not, it's unlikely to catch on large-scale

    • @focojeepr
      @focojeepr 3 дня назад

      Why waste the energy when earth already made rocks and it is comparatively much less energy to just mortar them together. This seems foolish.

  • @charlo90952
    @charlo90952 16 дней назад +11

    Earthquake resistance is a consideration. Unreinforced masonry structures are very vulnerable.

    • @rando5673
      @rando5673 15 дней назад

      So use nature's ultimate, infinitely renewable engineering material: wood. There are plenty of 500 year old wooden structures still standing because repairs are easy and it's really damn strong. We don't need 50-storey high-rise apartments if office work isn't concentrating all the jobs in 50-storey office buildings

  • @EEC350
    @EEC350 15 дней назад +1

    I will watch every single one of your videos as soon as it comes out. They are all so good! Thanks for what you do 🥰

  • @Leo-if5tn
    @Leo-if5tn 17 дней назад +5

    Hope this channel gets the attention it deserves!

  • @csabagajdos1215
    @csabagajdos1215 17 дней назад +9

    More industry needs more people. Both needs more buildings. People need livable spaces. They need it as cheap as possible. These are the basic problems, modernists tried to solve. Arches and vaults need hight, stone and brick walls are thick. They mean less useable space in the building. Slabs are more cost effective made of steel, later of reinforced concrete, also walls. Ornament costs a lot, but is not "useful". (Beautiful, but who cares?) Modernists tried to make philosophy for the new material: "The beauty is the aestethic of structure". In some cases it is, but generally the investor is not interested, or there is no time to refine the plan, or the architect is not gifted or trained enough to make beautyful plans. Some architests are "artists" who make statues for themselfes...
    So that's what led to the overuse of reinforced concrete. Meanwhile the knowledge of making ornaments or vaults has been almost lost during 20th century. To build any form made of concrete is easy and builders have its knowledge. Making vaults need more time, makes more cost. The main drive force here is to build quick and cheap.

    • @adrian.farcas
      @adrian.farcas 17 дней назад

      you are making an honest argument, but wasting your time here - the audience is a bunch of traditionalist snobs, who only care for their narrow privileged "visions".

    • @alexsmith-ob3lu
      @alexsmith-ob3lu 17 дней назад +3

      The end of WW2 brought about all this “quick and cheap” short sighted ideas of reinforced concrete.
      So much needed to be rebuilt as fast as possible for little cost, so most countries went the short sighted route that is now having disastrous consequences on us.

    • @rokos.1239
      @rokos.1239 14 дней назад

      ​@@alexsmith-ob3luwhat else could they do? Let people sleep on the streets? Specially with baby boom. You pretend like they had options specially countries hardest hit by the war.

  • @rachelnidhugain5398
    @rachelnidhugain5398 17 дней назад +3

    I love your work ❤️ your videos are always thought provoking

  • @jeffreychongsathien
    @jeffreychongsathien 17 дней назад +18

    Please do a video on shiny glass buildings. I'm convinced Foster & Partners are architectural terrorists.

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  17 дней назад +15

      Glass is definitely a good topic, and the so-called ‘transparency’ of these buildings

    • @gabetalks9275
      @gabetalks9275 17 дней назад

      They made multiple designs for the WTC and literally every single one looks hideous.

    • @hydrocharis1
      @hydrocharis1 17 дней назад +2

      ​@@the_aesthetic_cityAnd how these buildings get both cold in winter and hot in summer and thus are very energy-intensive. They didn't care about that in the 50s and 60s but somehow architects keep building them to this day.

    • @Bobrogers99
      @Bobrogers99 14 дней назад +1

      Glass itself has a very long life, but we install it into metal frames in our buildings, and those frames will corrode.

  • @mantisshadow8990
    @mantisshadow8990 16 дней назад

    It seems that the quality of the videos have improved so I must congratulate Aestetic City for this. Keep up the good work!

  • @josephrizzoiii
    @josephrizzoiii 17 дней назад +20

    I have been anti-rebar from the beginning, so nice to hear someone else talk about this.

  • @aldanesh2680
    @aldanesh2680 14 дней назад

    Your videos are amazing! I'm learning more from you than I learnt from most of the professors at university. Thank you a lot

  • @onstructures
    @onstructures 8 дней назад +2

    The reason the pantheon still exists is that every generation since decided that this one building was worth preserving. The plain concrete developed large cracks had to be found and repaired to prevent collapse. It should be obvious that every building cannot receive such treatment.

  • @eazydee5757
    @eazydee5757 17 дней назад +22

    Hello Aesthetic City, what are your thoughts on the return of murals to public spaces (particularly indoor public spaces) in newer classically-designed architecture? Murals, bringing a painted form of life, emotion, and beauty to public and common spaces, were quite common in older, classically and traditionally-designed buildings, but don’t seem to be too common in newer classical/traditional buildings nowadays.

    • @lance-biggums
      @lance-biggums 16 дней назад +2

      Entirely depends what the mural is. If it's some Cleon Peterson piece I'm gonna have to pass on that

    • @justjosie1163
      @justjosie1163 12 дней назад +1

      A mural to the classical standard is one thing. Unfortunately, the murals I have seen have been childish, dehumanizing monstrosities.

  • @mdhazeldine
    @mdhazeldine 17 дней назад +1

    Very interesting topic and informative video. One of your best thus far.

  • @marchelandersen6839
    @marchelandersen6839 16 дней назад +3

    use basalt rebar instead of iron ferro no rust cracking

  • @Ithirahad
    @Ithirahad 17 дней назад +27

    It's notable that there are non-corroding rebar options. Fibreglass rebar is already on the market, and other options probably exist.

    • @Ganily
      @Ganily 17 дней назад +6

      Epoxy coated rebar and stainless steel rebar is already common

    • @Khanfuzed1
      @Khanfuzed1 17 дней назад +2

      interested in some of the ash self healing concrete as well.
      curious what lifespan pf fiberglass is~ how rigid is it?

    • @Mooooov0815
      @Mooooov0815 17 дней назад +5

      @@Khanfuzed1 For many applications fiber reinforced concrete is similar to steel reinforced concrete. However, many of the fiber approaches give me strong asbestos vibes.

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  17 дней назад +24

      Yes, true - but the cost is often prohibitive. Still, it is one of the solutions. Maybe that will be the way of the future

    • @Descriptor413
      @Descriptor413 17 дней назад +6

      @@Mooooov0815 To be fair, if even asbestos was embedded deeply in concrete (and never exposed), it would be fine. It's when it powderizes and gets into the air that the mesothelioma can-can starts.

  • @JoLOD
    @JoLOD 14 дней назад

    thank you for this video !

  • @petersvan7880
    @petersvan7880 12 дней назад

    Excellent report, thank you!

  • @unconventionalideas5683
    @unconventionalideas5683 14 дней назад +2

    I am glad that increasingly more US construction is conducted with OSB. This material is a wood material that is arranged into square or rectangular panels and structurally strong, regardless of the direction of the grain of wood that is used to manufacture it. so long as it is kept away from water, it is a very robust material that survives well in terms of earthquakes. This material is also relatively easy to treat to improve fire resistance.

  • @RonRobertson-lafrance
    @RonRobertson-lafrance 17 дней назад +7

    This was really informative and interesting.

  • @K.Dilkington
    @K.Dilkington 14 дней назад

    Another great video with easily digestible information that makes it easy to share with those not involved in the architectural rebellion.

  • @shimogarcia
    @shimogarcia 17 дней назад +11

    I'm a simple man: I see a new video of The Aesthetic City, I like it and then I watch it.

    • @TheManHimself94
      @TheManHimself94 17 дней назад +2

      Same!

    • @disposabull
      @disposabull 16 дней назад +2

      I wish the did more videos, it's a good influence on the world and needs more views.

  • @DanielMasmanian
    @DanielMasmanian 17 дней назад

    Excellent and frightening. Thank you

  • @jomolhari
    @jomolhari 16 дней назад +6

    Ok no, first of all. If this is a problem you think nobody is talking about, it's because you're not related to the engineering and construction world. And if you are not indeed related to that field, I understand the existence of the video, because it's pretty uninformed.
    For all the problems you described, there are a lot of ways to avoid/solve them, to the point that it's 100% the builders to blame. For freezing conditions you have additives, for coastal buildings you have noncorrosive steel, additives that close the pores of concrete, special paintings. For alcali the only solution i know of is to choose the right materials beforehand, it's something that's not common at all in my area. All pathologies have been studied, documented, analyzed. There are a lot of publications of a lot of laboratories and professionals that investigate how to solve them. None of them is a "dark true" or "something not talked about".
    It is extremely important that professionals are well trained in the material. That's the main reason of all the pathologies associated with reinforced concrete. Just don't blame the material for the errors of the builders. If contractors in your area build poorly, denounce them, not their field.

    • @uisgeuisce
      @uisgeuisce 15 дней назад +3

      This channel just shits on everything that is not "classical"... Of course they have no idea what they are talking about.

  • @JohnMckeown-dl2cl
    @JohnMckeown-dl2cl 17 дней назад +2

    There are some products for reinforcement that can be used in the short term during the transition such as epoxy coated rebar or fiberglass rebar, but you are right going back to the old materials would be very beneficial except for very tall buildings where it would not be as practical. Good video.

  • @sieg4607
    @sieg4607 13 дней назад +1

    I wrote a paper on this topic earlier this year, good to see this is getting attention!

    • @Myria83
      @Myria83 6 дней назад

      I'd be interested in reading it...

  • @maximus5668
    @maximus5668 17 дней назад

    This channel is part of the new wave of bettering the world !!!

  • @robertozeladarodriguez5321
    @robertozeladarodriguez5321 17 дней назад +2

    What a great video, in the architecture course there is not much mention of the disadvantages of reinforced concrete or other solutions like the ones in the video.

  • @MikesterCurtis
    @MikesterCurtis День назад

    A rectangular concrete block of offices or apartments on a grey day can really affect one's mood.
    What a profound video!

  • @timrockman7
    @timrockman7 5 дней назад

    Very eye opening video!
    I worked for a company that built kilns and furnaces using angle iron frames to support high temperature concrete structures. For the disk shaped lids of crucible furnaces which were less than 4 inches thick, we used stainless steel fiber mixed into the castings concrete.
    The cured pieces were extremely tough and they could withstand hundreds of strikes from a sledge hammer. I had to break a lid out of its frame once because of a dimensional mistake and the effort needed was amazingly intence.

  • @Bobrogers99
    @Bobrogers99 14 дней назад +1

    I'm old, and I can remember highway bridges being built years ago, and many of them have had to be rebuilt recently! Some were not well maintained, and road salt speeded up the deterioration, but the cause was the corrosion of the steel reinforcing. Fifty years is far too short a lifespan for something so expensive as a highway bridge. If humans vanished from the earth, in a hundred years or so the evidence of our existence would not be most of our present-day architectural wonders. What would still be here are the stone structures built hundreds of years ago.

  • @shahriar4706
    @shahriar4706 15 дней назад +2

    Very insightful, my friend. I have been a follower of this channel for a long time. So I would like to humbly invite you to explore Eastern architecture. Could be traditional Slavic, Saracenic, Indo, Japanese or even Chinese. It would go on to inspire people from far beyond to join this idea.

  • @Dietsch_III
    @Dietsch_III 17 дней назад

    Amazing video!

  • @lupus7297
    @lupus7297 16 дней назад +2

    Great video!!! Very well researched from my perspective as a civil engineer.

  • @maximiliennicodeme5309
    @maximiliennicodeme5309 17 дней назад +3

    Great video! Very interesting subject that we learn about in architecture school but that civil engineers don't care about.
    I'm a dual-trained architect and engineer, and this question of a return to geometry in the natural order has been on my mind...
    The question is how to introduce these more reasonable construction methods into a capitalist system that relies solely on short-term profit?
    We still have a lot of work to do in this direction...

  • @lotx5364
    @lotx5364 17 дней назад +7

    Does the limestone not get eroded? I studied a limestone landscape and the limestone is susceptible to be eroded by acid rain. Acid rain dissolves limestone because the limestone reacts with the rain to create calcite which is soluble. I only know about Karst landscapes though, is something done with buildings to make them less susceptible to this?

    • @atherzaidi5871
      @atherzaidi5871 4 дня назад

      Please search Red Fort of New Delhi and Agra Fort in India. They are standing for 400 years or so.

  • @CoG3in1
    @CoG3in1 14 дней назад +1

    Very interesting! I'm studying civil engineering and I'm very curious to see how this method might change the way we build

  • @CrankyHermit
    @CrankyHermit 17 дней назад +1

    Another great video - you're really good at this! I'm rather partial to mud buildings (adobe & rammed earth) and alternatives like hempcrete. It must be said, however, that concrete does have some unique strengths, in proper applications designed to last.
    It can also be beautiful, when used in creative ways. The addition of aggregates such as crushed brick or glass can provide visual and textural interest, as can the use of board-forming. Grouting recesses and voids in a subtly contasting color can make a nice effect. And there are lovely Japanese paving techniques using natural pigments in the mix and a scattering of small stones (and perhaps rock salt), embedded in the surface and exposed by washing during the cure.
    As with nearly any material, concrete's aesthetic potentials are only reached with sensitivity and some skilled labor. When used to its best advantage, it can even grow stronger and more beautiful with time.

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  17 дней назад +3

      Thank you, and I fully agree - it is a very versatile material, and it can be beautiful, but the industrial application in the form of reinforced concrete is the major problem here. Hempcrete might be a future video topic!

    • @CrankyHermit
      @CrankyHermit 17 дней назад

      @@the_aesthetic_city Yes, of course you're right. And yes to a hempcrete video!

    • @yvehill
      @yvehill 16 дней назад

      Hempcrete, dustcrete (chunky sawdust), aircrete or foamcrete... still use Portland cement, but I would love to see your thoughts on them.

  • @carolina.helena
    @carolina.helena 13 дней назад

    Stunning video, congrats for its quality and all the information that encompasses! To your list of problems I would also add concerns to human health: concrete has been linked to respiratory and musculoskeletal problems in construction workers, that are exposed long-term to its toxic dust in poorly ventilated construction sites. And it contributes to heat island effect in cities, which also comes with another array of public health risks. I wonder as well how we can economically reward a not-so-disposable way to build and motivate the sector to change its current approach!

  • @christijanrobert1627
    @christijanrobert1627 17 дней назад +13

    By way of observation amongst the people in my life, both sides of the spectrum, I find most post-modernist artsy-fartsy types are fairly left-leaning and with this video, you are convincing them their less-than-lovely, preferred styles are actually unsustainable. For some people who love their brutalism or the 'cult of the ego' style buildings, this argument to choose alternatives to concrete may cause cognitive dissonance in many, leading to some who might... just might actually have to accept that their beloved 'beauty is in the eye of beholder' monstrosity is hurting the environment and cheap materials that form our cityscapes lead to eventual 'dis'function.
    Me, personally I love this argument and whole heartedly would love to see a renewal in beauty in architecture. A revival of beauty is necessary for the sake of humanity's soul. As such, I am convinced even more and have learned a great deal. Dank u wel. As for the above-mentioned types, the questions remains: will facts win over entrenched feelings? These days, I can hope but I never hold my breath.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 16 дней назад +1

      Welcome to cognitive bias. It's harder to convince someone they are fooled than to fool them...

    • @christijanrobert1627
      @christijanrobert1627 16 дней назад

      @@theotherohlourdespadua1131 It's good to have a name for this form of bias. I will remember it now. Many thanks!

  • @Tickettoriderailway
    @Tickettoriderailway 16 дней назад +2

    Long term we should be looking at materials such as basalt, no CO2 reaction to worry about! This would require new building regs so not a short term solution. For now I like the idea just using stone and craftsmanship!

  • @martijnkeisers5900
    @martijnkeisers5900 14 дней назад +1

    Geweldige video, zoals altijd!

  • @Oldhogleg
    @Oldhogleg 4 дня назад +1

    Left out the major drawback in using compression only construction; being limited to low rise buildings, especially in earthquake areas

  • @euler4273
    @euler4273 16 дней назад

    Thank you so much for the great video! It's crazy that modern architecture is so short-sighted, focusing on replacing previous buildings for the sake of shareholder's profit, which will again only last a few decades, while not making more housing that will last hundreds of years, and alleviate the increasingly large housing crisis.

  • @eldinsmajlovic1554
    @eldinsmajlovic1554 14 дней назад

    Awesome video!

  • @r.b.l.5841
    @r.b.l.5841 16 дней назад +2

    A vid where we say "concrete" has this long term problem, then explain the problem is the steel...

    • @colesonafrank5329
      @colesonafrank5329 6 дней назад

      While the video did focus on the detrimental effects of rebar corrosion on concrete it also briefly mentioned some of the degradation processes that are inherent to Portland cement's hydration bonds and porous nature. Much of the Portland cement empire/industry exists as desperate(ly profitable) efforts to overcome its fundamental flaws with admixtures (e.g. water reducing plasticizers) and supplemental materials (e.g. alumina-silicates to take transform excess alkali from being detrimental to advantageous). Make no mistake, the problems (and thus short-term profitability and long-term planned obsolescence) of Portland cement result from its calcium based chemistry. It will never be a sustainable building material and every effort should have been made to develop far superior alternatives like alkali-activated alumina-silicates, introduced by the Romans and rediscovered back in the 1950s by the Russians and used for years for things like bomb-resistant bunkers by the US military. Unfortunately, attempting to maximize private profit/power guarantees that solutions to problems which minimize complete life-cycle costs will be systematically and resoundingly opposed, obfuscated and otherwise buried until the real costs of uncontrolled capitalism become catastrophic (e.g. the currently changing climate).

  • @side-fish
    @side-fish 15 дней назад +2

    My issue with concrete is that the building is homogenous and thus construction has to be continuous. If only it was more modular, then you can just replace the elements individually. Thankfully, there is precast concrete where you can just remove only the damaged portion instead of destroying the entire structure. Of course, depending on the structure, mileage can vary.

  • @kenmorrisproducer
    @kenmorrisproducer 10 дней назад +1

    Noting that pink rebar (made of fiberglass) is stronger, lighter, cheaper, won’t corrode and it’s a fun color. Sodium bicarbonate can be added to dry mix to reduce the c02 emissions of concrete as it cures, and in the cement manufacturing process, the heat used to make the portlandite can be reclaimed to generate electricity. Same with the emissions. It just requires government legislation to do so.

  • @juanortizyepez7253
    @juanortizyepez7253 3 дня назад

    The work of Christopher Alexander is remarkable in this sense. It brings again the human architecture language at hand for anybody. Great videO THANK YOU ❤

  • @tomthomson7367
    @tomthomson7367 17 дней назад +1

    I hope there will be a video about those strange alienating glass boxes in every city.

  • @great.933
    @great.933 6 дней назад

    This is the best channel on You Tube.

  • @aviniddam1074
    @aviniddam1074 12 часов назад

    Bravo!
    Very smart! Really!

  • @stadtbilddeutschlande.v.3190
    @stadtbilddeutschlande.v.3190 14 дней назад +2

    Fantastic video! Besides all the ecological and structural problems of the concrete the buildings are built of today it is indeed a very unappealing looking material. Especially when it comes to brutalist or in some ways also contemporary architecture. Anyway, continue your great work!

  • @coolmeister522
    @coolmeister522 11 дней назад +2

    Fiberglass rebar or basalt fiber rebar is the answer to issues with steel reinforcement. It has many properties that are actually superior to steel and it will effectively last forever. Roman concrete had ash and clumps of unmixed lime that kept the concrete itself from eventually cracking and breaking down. Concrete is best used for foundations and slab floors where, if properly insulated, drained, and not on poor soil, it experiences only compression forces and is uniformly supported by the earth.

  • @wiekvanvenetie3797
    @wiekvanvenetie3797 16 дней назад

    This must be your best video to date! I really like how instead of using the subjective 'traditional looks better' argument, you used facts to prove important points about the effectiveness and sustainability of classic form and materials in architecture. This video also leaves room for more contemporary interpretations of traditional solutions, which i think will be the ultimate solution. We should aim to create new beautiful styles without acopying past styles, like gothic architecture or Amsterdam School accomplished when they were first invented.

  • @PhoenixHen
    @PhoenixHen 17 дней назад +4

    The more you know, the sadder you become...

  • @gamecubekingdevon3
    @gamecubekingdevon3 13 дней назад +1

    Something i do not understand is why we do not use more recycled polymers, considering that most of the plastic is not recycled because of purity problems making it unusable for food packaging , but that post polymers have quite a decent weight to tensile strengh ratio, even recycled stuff, and on top of that would be made of garbage (so, the process of harvesting it would have a double use: cleaning environment and scavenging raw material sources ). I m especially thinking about polyethylene and polypropylene , like, imagine using some recycled HDPE and PP pieces in the same say wood was used traditionally,
    We could also potebtially find an use for the desert sand that is too smooth for concrete by sintering it into solid glass-like bricks (heat treated glass can have a better impact resistance than unreinforced concrete) or by fully melting and processing it into fiberglass (fiberglass , even in the E form has above 3 gpa of UTS, so, it absolutely beat reinforced concrete s tensile strength in cartoonish proportions )
    Especially when we consider glass s very high chemical resilience , abrasion resistance and recyclability (and we can either let it be transparent or make it opaque by adding things inside)
    Like, imagine using the desert sand to make fiberglass, and then process recycled plastics into a matrix for such fibers and creating a low cost version of fiberglass composite for buildings (and the for part that need the focus on compressive strengh using heat treated glass bricks ) we could have something much stronger that still allow the same ease of design as concrete (probably more actually ) while having much superior durability

  • @LeRegardNaif
    @LeRegardNaif 10 дней назад

    Great video as always. The main issue is not concrete by itself, but rather the short-term minds ruling the world.

  • @yorgo6074
    @yorgo6074 17 дней назад

    Hi @The Aesthetic City ,Great video as always..can you please recommend books on how to build with traditional architecture,like hands on how to guide ?i have been reading books on Classical archirecture ,about the 5 orders ,mostly design but i find i lack on civil engineering part of it,like you said building with arches and Domes,any recommendation would be much appreciated..thanks again and keep up the good work, your Channel is worth so much.

  • @jeffreychongsathien
    @jeffreychongsathien 17 дней назад +13

    The human species isn't evolved enough to incorporate closed loop/full life cycle thinking into its activities.

    • @the_aesthetic_city
      @the_aesthetic_city  17 дней назад +5

      We will need to if we want to keep growing as a society

    • @justjosie1163
      @justjosie1163 12 дней назад

      So we have devolved? Because for many centuries we absolutely built in such a manner.

    • @accidentalchrist
      @accidentalchrist 5 дней назад

      Thanks to Marxist proponents

  • @JohnBorstlap
    @JohnBorstlap 13 дней назад +1

    Great video. The idea of working with nature instead of merely exploiting it, has bearing on all the arts, where modernism in any form has worked against nature: against human nature.

  • @matts8791
    @matts8791 17 дней назад

    Very necessary video

  • @ryandeschanel6925
    @ryandeschanel6925 17 дней назад

    So... Exactly what we had always thought.

  • @aumenarys
    @aumenarys 17 дней назад +4

    Just so you know, for future videos, we pronounce the T in "béton bruT" in French ;)

  • @ELS-tone
    @ELS-tone 15 дней назад +1

    In this case, I agree with the conclusion, but I would point out that concrete's speed & at least short term cheapness has helped to lift millions upon millions of people out of poverty by providing better & more affordable housing. The challenge now is to transition from focusing on purely economic needs to sustainability & localized beauty

  • @aarongonzalez952
    @aarongonzalez952 17 дней назад

    Great video as always! I do have a question, does those type of construction can withstand earthquakes?

  • @dwwolf4636
    @dwwolf4636 5 дней назад +2

    There's always Stainless or basalt rebar.

  • @kattybob1749
    @kattybob1749 16 дней назад +1

    So, making concrete is like crushing dry pasta into tiny grains adding egg and water and making "fresh" pasta.? Also the song. everything is awesome from the lego movie popped into my brain when you said buildings last for 50 to 100 years and then they get pulled down and a new build gets done. Could coating a fresh steel rebar in a plastic coating help, because a lot of those bars are already rusty before they go into a build .

  • @avgFloridian
    @avgFloridian 14 дней назад +1

    13:58 Excellent pun.
    13:54 The competency crisis is a real problem.

  • @JFANDHISPEOPLE
    @JFANDHISPEOPLE 15 дней назад

    They are using Zinc anodes after doing Spalling work to slow the process of rebar degradation, im guessing they could implement a whole system attached to the rebar through out the building process, or as another person mentioned earlier, graphene🤔Btw great video!

  • @panzrok8701
    @panzrok8701 15 дней назад +2

    Its really depressing how most new buildings look disgusting and detached from history and culture. Its really hard to not vandalize them.

  • @davi_lemos
    @davi_lemos 4 дня назад

    I would love for you to cover new approaches to urbanism like Dror Benshetrit's Bioplanning and other ecological or biomimetic systems

  • @Theincrediblespud
    @Theincrediblespud 16 дней назад

    Could you make a video about sustainable solutions such as hempcrete or cob? The Nito Project has some great videos.

  • @kfh123
    @kfh123 12 дней назад

    Important video. Thank you. As a side note: After WWII many houses were rebuilt with stone collected from destroyed houses. Recycling at its best. Today, in a war zone like Syria for example, nothing of the damaged modernist concrete buildings can be reused. Its all gravel for roads.

  • @prefaktder4tenlegio257
    @prefaktder4tenlegio257 14 дней назад

    9:40 (Potsdam) It's nice to see that some of the old buildings are being reconstructed. But ther core is still made out of concrete so...

  • @yakub3962
    @yakub3962 17 дней назад +1

    Well but you see, if the life cycle of buildings is lower it opens up more opportunities for architects to evolve artistically since there's more work.