How Bricks Are Made From Plastic Trash | World Wide Waste | Insider Business

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  • Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
  • A company shreds, melts, and molds a secret mixture of hard-to-recycle plastics to make solid bricks and beams. The building materials are cheaper and faster to assemble than most traditional ones. The system has helped increase waste collectors' income and address a shortage of school buildings in Ivory Coast.
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    How Bricks Are Made From Plastic Trash | World Wide Waste | Insider Business

Комментарии • 774

  • @BusinessInsider
    @BusinessInsider  Год назад +7

    We want your help expanding Insider's videos about the environment, climate change, and sustainability. Tell us your thoughts in this 2-3 minute survey: bit.ly/InsiderWWWsurvey 


    Thanks so much!

    • @korencek
      @korencek Год назад +1

      poor people not knowing that fumes that this walls produce are cancerous.

    • @Nature.love-it
      @Nature.love-it Год назад

      ​@@korencekRight

    • @gamerwhiz6847
      @gamerwhiz6847 Год назад

      @@korencek If shellacked it won't outgas.

    • @justinnelson6169
      @justinnelson6169 Год назад

      You guys should reach out to The Ocean Cleanup Project and see if they can supply you too.

    • @SamuelOtoo-pd9nr
      @SamuelOtoo-pd9nr Год назад

      i wish to establish a brantch in Ghana

  • @freeman4755
    @freeman4755 Год назад +293

    5:30 So cool, imagine being so game changing that UNICEF reaches out to your company for help. Absolutely great story that benefits so many different people!

    • @GratDuForloradeArgumentet
      @GratDuForloradeArgumentet Год назад +1

      Having a school out of plastic seems absolutley terrible actually, for the childrens health.

    • @lass_isolet
      @lass_isolet Год назад +3

      ​@@GratDuForloradeArgumentet i've been wondering about that too but I hope their secret does counter this problem

    • @X2yt
      @X2yt Год назад

      @@GratDuForloradeArgumentet I'm quite sure they probably take care of health risks during manufacturing process. And even if they don't, it still beats literally living in piles of plastic waste, exposed to toxins, elements, and all the runoff that creaters with all the piles of plastic everywhere.

    • @xxxxxv_
      @xxxxxv_ Год назад +3

      @@GratDuForloradeArgumentet they alr said that they seperate plastics that are toxic when melted from the others. It should be safe for the children to be surrounded by plastic. I mean if u stay in a room full of plastic bags there wont be harm right?

    • @GratDuForloradeArgumentet
      @GratDuForloradeArgumentet Год назад

      @@xxxxxv_ Africans need to
      1. Stop overpopulating
      2. Start caring about the enviroment

  • @truthkeeperfilms
    @truthkeeperfilms Год назад +510

    That’s absolutely phenomenal. A benefit in almost every way you cut it. Instead of investing in wars and what not, nations should invest in these companies but they won’t because that’s not their agenda.

    • @pudanielson1
      @pudanielson1 Год назад

      Capitalism is the cause and problem

    • @rtdoglover106
      @rtdoglover106 Год назад +2

      Totally agree

    • @rake483
      @rake483 Год назад +2

      What governments are doing is the agenda of corporations and the rich. Show me one politican that is not the puppet of some lobbyists. Many governments have more lobbyists than politicans.

    • @chibchan3765
      @chibchan3765 Год назад

      well, other nations don't even care about puberty.

    • @truthkeeperfilms
      @truthkeeperfilms Год назад +1

      @@rake483 - The control goes well beyond corporations. There have been wealthy elite that have been running the show a long time. At this point, leaders like CEOs are given commands. Globalism will continue and finally establish once the right crisis has hit. We will witness it in our lifetimes, and I say by the way things are going, it will happen within 3-5 years

  • @DarkGT
    @DarkGT Год назад +530

    This trash to bricks business seems very common in Africa. It looks like the African nations are more capable of recycling and re-using.

    • @peanutbutterpirate314
      @peanutbutterpirate314 Год назад +19

      It’s cause they create so much waste

    • @DarkGT
      @DarkGT Год назад +1

      @@peanutbutterpirate314 No, every nation produce waste. Go to any megacity and observe the tons of trash they produce every day. The real reason is that there is cheap labor and lack of other cheap construction materials. If there was proper recycling facility there amount of plastic for bricks would be even larger.

    • @theotheleo6830
      @theotheleo6830 Год назад

      @@peanutbutterpirate314 Have you seen the news? Western countries create so much waste that some ship their waste to other countries.

    • @linkslegionaire357
      @linkslegionaire357 Год назад +54

      Moreso people in Western countries don't want to sort plastic for $0.16 USD/day

    • @carlosnino6476
      @carlosnino6476 Год назад +137

      @@peanutbutterpirate314 they don’t create a lot of waste, but a lot of waste in developed countries get shipped to developing countries. Also, those developing countries don’t have ways to manage waste the same way as developed country. But in the grand scheme of things, they create a small amount of waste compared to other countries

  • @alveres9680
    @alveres9680 Год назад +154

    I just want to encourage everyone involved, and thank you! Thinkers and do’ers like you are what make me proud to be a human.
    That’s sometimes pretty hard these days.
    Thank you all and great work!

  • @arashnikoubashman6946
    @arashnikoubashman6946 Год назад +290

    I know there will be many naysayers, but this solution is much better than the status quo, where the garbage is just dumped somewhere or burned

    • @potterj09
      @potterj09 Год назад +13

      Vs lithium mining in illegal African artisinal mines for Tesla batteries.

    • @SevenHunnid
      @SevenHunnid Год назад +2

      I love to do food videos while smoking weed on my RUclips channel, to cure people’s boredom 💀

    • @rjbarnes1597
      @rjbarnes1597 Год назад +11

      Imagine using the plastic beams to build better housing in areas that suffer from earthquakes. Im sure plastic bend better than concrete and it's a great way to recycle plastic! ♻️

    • @blu12gaming44
      @blu12gaming44 Год назад +9

      At least it's not directly polluting the well water below a school full of children.

    • @derpychicken2131
      @derpychicken2131 Год назад

      @@rjbarnes1597plastic has nowhere near as much compression strength as concrete. Compression strength supports the entire weight of the structure and concrete is one of the best materials at this. Foundations and even having more floors on plastic is simply unsafe due to its lack of strength, however one could make panels out of it to line walls and have the main support beams be concrete. However this would not help at all with flexibility, but plastic is unable to hold up structures.

  • @akdlg9sjjslk8
    @akdlg9sjjslk8 Год назад +139

    Watching this brought a smile to my face, especially seeing the children smiling and learning in a classroom that’s much cleaner and full of space. I wish this company all the best in providing classrooms for people in need. This could also help with housing problem so that families can live in better homes too. The supply of plastic will not end after all, and once the all schools are built we have to keep reusing the plastic for something. I’m really happy something like this exists for those communities

    • @gabrieldsouza6541
      @gabrieldsouza6541 Год назад +1

      When it reaches 40-50 degrees celsius in these regions due to climate change, do you foresee any possible effects of having dark, heat absorbing walls made of carcinogenic materials? Have they studied the effect this material might have on children's respiratory systems if it's heated? I think this should be studied, especially when we're talking about waste plastics and children in poorly ventilated rooms.

    • @germanjohn5626
      @germanjohn5626 Год назад

      And the plastic toxins that will cause cancer in the future and kill those kids are conveniently forgotten...because look ma, its "clean"

    • @gabrieldsouza6541
      @gabrieldsouza6541 Год назад

      @@germanjohn5626 plastics are the environmental equivalent of lead to this generation. there is no "safe" level of plastics, because ALL plastics break down in to microscopic fragments and can enter our bloodstream or digestive tract through bioaccumulation, causing cancers, illnesses, and death. i understand all plastic can't be replaced overnight, but we need to immediately halt all new plastics manufacturing expansions and reduce plastic demand and production immediately through state action in the interest of public health and welfare.

    • @GratDuForloradeArgumentet
      @GratDuForloradeArgumentet Год назад

      Having a school out of plastic seems absolutley terrible actually, for the childrens health.

  • @gmtegirl
    @gmtegirl Год назад +77

    I love stories like this! It's a win, win, win, win, win! And the biggest winners are the little children. How heart warming.

    • @GratDuForloradeArgumentet
      @GratDuForloradeArgumentet Год назад

      Having a school out of plastic seems absolutley terrible actually, for the childrens health.

    • @bgdgdgdf4488
      @bgdgdgdf4488 2 месяца назад

      @@GratDuForloradeArgumentet Why should it be any more dangerous than drinking soda from a plastic bottle? Which you have probably done many times in your life?

  • @fabiojesus1307
    @fabiojesus1307 Год назад +20

    Other countries could adopt this amazing model! Not only to build schools, but also houses for these people who are in great need.

  • @thegreencompany2101
    @thegreencompany2101 Год назад +47

    Great example of sustainability! Amazing to see how waste materials are used as raw material for new products! I really like that❤️🙌🏼

  • @stagnantfox3027
    @stagnantfox3027 Год назад +47

    While this is super great, I hope everyone can understand that this doesn't mean that you get to suddenly not have to care about recycling or start littering wherever.

  • @colinreece3452
    @colinreece3452 Год назад +14

    I clicked on this out of curiosity and i'm glad I did. What you guys are doing is fantastic, I was amazed at the outcome and to do that from waste too. Just think if more countries did this it would make such a big difference, also other things could be made like this, the list is endless.

  • @thischannelisbackon5679
    @thischannelisbackon5679 Год назад +46

    Provides jobs
    Provides industry
    Provides waste disposal
    Provides help
    Provides hope
    Very good.

    • @zombl337og
      @zombl337og Год назад +1

      absolutely

    • @beyamoth
      @beyamoth Год назад

      Provides plastic to be degraded by UV and make microplastics for the environment 👍

    • @RayIrv
      @RayIrv Год назад

      Provides education
      Education ... provides

  • @machivaldemon
    @machivaldemon Год назад +46

    dont comment microplastic please, i know you care but this stuff they do there still helps, a lot.

    • @exotic80
      @exotic80 Год назад +5

      my first thought was what are long term health effects but honestly, its probably a huge net benefit to get these people into better wages and better education.

  • @JohnSmith-kf1fc
    @JohnSmith-kf1fc Год назад +9

    Such a great idea and solution for millions of tons of plastic!

  • @killaclownz911
    @killaclownz911 Год назад +12

    Yooo that school house is great, happy to see this level of sustainability through plastics that take lifetimes to decompose.

  • @jguitar23
    @jguitar23 Год назад +8

    Really super◇◇◇◇ Very glad to see this progress but those exposed to dust should wear masks!!!

  • @abpccpba
    @abpccpba Год назад +7

    Have the bricks been tested for fire hazard?

  • @Patriotamineiro66
    @Patriotamineiro66 Год назад +3

    👏👏👏👏👏 Yes, this project is very top. Hope it expands all over the world

  • @rev.dr.davidcole8915
    @rev.dr.davidcole8915 Год назад +3

    It's fantastic on so many levels. This should be in every country in the world.

  • @kevinagungrahadi7528
    @kevinagungrahadi7528 Год назад +16

    Its better than a status quo when it comes about plastic 👍🏻

  • @steelmill
    @steelmill Год назад +1

    This looks like a win for everyone

  • @knittedplushie
    @knittedplushie Год назад +7

    This is an incredible invention

  • @htn1986
    @htn1986 Год назад +19

    What an amazing and innovative business idea. The fund is fed back to the community that the product helps.

  • @donovandelaney3171
    @donovandelaney3171 Год назад +2

    They should be doing that for homeless people and the poor in California and Vegas too.

  • @grbsampahchannel8783
    @grbsampahchannel8783 Год назад +2

    wow, that's great, sis. Greetings, I'm from Indonesia

  • @8rlx0
    @8rlx0 Год назад +19

    I'm curious how durable these kind of products are? I'd think with years the bricks would start disintegrating from sun damage unless protected?

    • @carlosnino6476
      @carlosnino6476 Год назад +20

      Plastic last for centuries even exposed by a lot of sun. I would be more concerned by micro plastic going down with rains. Structural safety tbh I don’t think it would be a problem if they are used only for small building like the schools. For buildings and big houses I don’t know, they can make it work

    • @greulich9635
      @greulich9635 Год назад +7

      @@carlosnino6476 my main worry is fire. If one of these goes up it could be catastrophic as the whole thing melts.

    • @jekker1000
      @jekker1000 Год назад +3

      all very valid concerns. I think that is one of the reasons this project is being done in an african country and not in developed world. In developed world, a lot of plastics are recycled too, i.e. as rain gutters or temporary traffic light bases or pallets. But not as road surface or anything structural. I think this is a good idea with a mediocre execution.

    • @icetrip2417
      @icetrip2417 Год назад

      ​@@greulich9635 I heard its not like that

    • @supertouring1
      @supertouring1 Год назад +5

      The business owner mentioned they're adding some secret chemicals to the mixture which I assume gives the plastic blocks more strength and durability.

  • @detechthefutureofln2tankmo510
    @detechthefutureofln2tankmo510 Год назад +1

    Great innovation!!!

  • @andresfelipebarreradiaz8135
    @andresfelipebarreradiaz8135 Год назад +1

    QUE ORGULLOSO 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉 ES SER COLOMBIANO AL VER ESTOS PROYECTOS QUE CAMBIAN VIDAS COLOMBIA SACANDO LA CARA LINDA ANTE EL MUNDO

  • @elisewilliams1575
    @elisewilliams1575 Год назад +1

    Those walls actually look great

  • @paulschmolke188
    @paulschmolke188 Год назад +2

    Do it in the USA and build homes for the homeless👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽

  • @nickbremner6274
    @nickbremner6274 Год назад +5

    What a brilliant idea! We've had street name plaques and even park benches made from plastic waste (and old car tyres I think) for years but making building materials to assemble schools with so much involvement of local workers is so much more useful!

  • @misiek9989
    @misiek9989 Год назад +1

    Building houses using giant Lego bricks looks so cool.

  • @waylandjennings4073
    @waylandjennings4073 Год назад +2

    I think this is great. God bless these people. They're doing good work.

  • @rohmanshah2679
    @rohmanshah2679 Год назад +1

    Thanks from London

  • @fredrossman1189
    @fredrossman1189 Год назад +1

    may the light shine on you.. you are the blessing.

  • @arevolvingdoor3836
    @arevolvingdoor3836 Год назад +4

    I love microplastics!!

  • @Buukii-buuchi
    @Buukii-buuchi Год назад +2

    I also had a idea of making trash into bricks but it look like my idea has been taken by geniuses’

  • @donnah5378
    @donnah5378 Год назад +1

    Beautiful 👏🏾👏🏾

  • @rev_dude
    @rev_dude Год назад +11

    Overall I think this is a good thing, working directly with the people and not through intermediaries is admirable, but if their goal is to help the most people, they should be open-sourcing their processes. Hiding the most critical step of production shows he is also interested in profit..
    Also, its less of a direct problem here because there is so much waste dumping already, but this process, and these materials are absolute microplastic factories.

  • @saimandebbarma
    @saimandebbarma Год назад +2

    Everything is possible if humans want & this is the live results.....👍

  • @donaldharlan3981
    @donaldharlan3981 Год назад +1

    excellent craft !

  • @reddydc5562
    @reddydc5562 Год назад +2

    Absolutely inspiring, i feel like going there and build classrooms like that for those kids.

  • @williamlloyd3769
    @williamlloyd3769 Год назад +28

    Amazing adaptive reuse of plastic. Stable, rot and insect resistant, this material makes sense.
    PS - Reading recent articles about the USA plastic waste stream, this seems to be a process that shows you the end product instead of some unknown end point

    • @tomo1168
      @tomo1168 Год назад +5

      that plastic building in the summer heat is probably not the healthiest environment for the children, but still much better than no school.

  • @marctamtonthat
    @marctamtonthat Год назад +2

    This is very clever and it brings hope. Bravo.

  • @kajuancommunity6452
    @kajuancommunity6452 Год назад +2

    A very nice idea hope that the company will expand and bring the technology here in the Philippines...

  • @rickg.5171
    @rickg.5171 Год назад +1

    Brilliant.

  • @13thravenpurple94
    @13thravenpurple94 Год назад +1

    Great video Thank you

  • @christiancrow
    @christiancrow Год назад +1

    Wow 😮 ❤

  • @rubenovsepian4977
    @rubenovsepian4977 Год назад +1

    God bless you and your family

  • @1347x
    @1347x Год назад +2

    Amazing! the world needs this.

  • @toadabc
    @toadabc Год назад +4

    I can only imagine how fast the US government could come in and ruin a system like this.

  • @wireflier1886
    @wireflier1886 Год назад +6

    This is an absolutely genius idea

  • @dannydeshler4327
    @dannydeshler4327 Год назад +2

    Outstanding! So happy that a way to truly help people AND clean our environment has been put in place. This is awesome.

  • @DyslexicAnaboko
    @DyslexicAnaboko Год назад +2

    They need this in Nigeria badly.

  • @johnathanjohnson5429
    @johnathanjohnson5429 Год назад

    Thanks Every Country Need This!!!!

  • @SexyEarHair
    @SexyEarHair Год назад +29

    They could also make some pamphlets or something and distribute them to the households to pre sort some things. That would drastically speed up the sorting process in the factory.

    • @nickmartin1527
      @nickmartin1527 Год назад

      Exactly

    • @triangulum8869
      @triangulum8869 Год назад

      The majority of the pamphlets would probably be thrown away

    • @SexyEarHair
      @SexyEarHair Год назад

      @@triangulum8869 Most everyone was already recycling their stuff why would they just toss the pamphlet? They are paying people to collect it in the street If it was pre sorted they could pay them more since it would save time. Its a win win

  • @kennethhudson8013
    @kennethhudson8013 Год назад +1

    AND a hell of a lot of plastic is still out there!

  • @kirsten1992
    @kirsten1992 Год назад +1

    Very nice that they do this, but I think its very flammable!

  • @gr8bkset-524
    @gr8bkset-524 Год назад +2

    We need to tax fossil fuel products such as virgin plastics so that reuse and recycle becomes more prevalent.

  • @dhollongstreet4725
    @dhollongstreet4725 Год назад +1

    The company needs to expand into India and south Asia.

  • @hassanshayegannik155
    @hassanshayegannik155 Год назад +2

    Unbelievable and wonderful. There is a hope for the future of our environment. Bravo! Thanks!

  • @jamesdeane2843
    @jamesdeane2843 Год назад +1

    Seeing the smiles from those beautiful children warms your heart. They should scale up that process and take it to other countries.

  • @wind369
    @wind369 Год назад +4

    This is the biggest w in recycling I’ve ever seen

  • @johnanderson591
    @johnanderson591 Год назад

    Thank God someone is doing this

  • @Howt-ooo
    @Howt-ooo Год назад +1

    Great work

  • @footballhub596
    @footballhub596 Год назад +1

    Very impressive

  • @TheDocPharm
    @TheDocPharm Год назад +1

    Wow

  • @steelwitness
    @steelwitness Год назад

    watching mothers do hard labor in the sun with children on their back brought tears to my eyes. we really take our privileged society for granted

  • @MissMarshall
    @MissMarshall Год назад +1

    Good work!!!

  • @donb6474
    @donb6474 Год назад +1

    I remember years ago they made plastic houses. The houses were a disaster. So what is the difference not. I would like to know if these new building will hold up.

  • @sabr_kz_2022
    @sabr_kz_2022 Год назад +1

    Молодцы !

  • @dududuzuud
    @dududuzuud Год назад

    This is just outstanding.

  • @fiveainone
    @fiveainone Год назад +2

    Great way to do two things at once. But wonder about the amount of micro and nano plastic that are created from the manufacturing process. These workers should be given proper filtration masks as well.

  • @birdiemiller4219
    @birdiemiller4219 11 месяцев назад

    Africa and South America, making changes in the world and for all people. The children benefit most of all and are so grateful. One million more children to go; wish I was there, instead of here in America. Thank you for the heart warming story, look forward to many updates. Many blessings to all.

  • @Dd-sunshine68
    @Dd-sunshine68 Год назад +1

    I would love to build a house with those bricks

  • @rgbcolor6450
    @rgbcolor6450 Год назад +1

    Those plastic building blocks won't rot or degrade for a long time. very low maintenance.

  • @Martin_Priesthood
    @Martin_Priesthood Год назад +1

    Great job guys. Awesome technology. Those classrooms are so beautiful. God bless.

  • @virginiajessee3708
    @virginiajessee3708 9 месяцев назад

    The whole world need to do this

  • @erwinbenally8027
    @erwinbenally8027 Год назад +1

    Great idea, thanks for sharing 👍

  • @InfoRanker
    @InfoRanker Год назад +2

    Seems like these things would be a fire hazard though.

    • @festyguy7405
      @festyguy7405 Год назад

      Not really because it’s hard solid stuff.

  • @08peter1966
    @08peter1966 Год назад +1

    Great idea and i think i have seen this before....but i wonder about the fire hazzard, because once plastics burns it burns like hell.

  • @1patriotman973
    @1patriotman973 Год назад

    This is a great idea. Almost everything can be recycled ♻️
    This could actually help with the homeless problems in the USA. Instead of wasting money on wars let's help out the American citizens.

  • @faresahmed2343
    @faresahmed2343 Год назад +3

    How can I get this product and how much does it cost per meter

  • @damamen1
    @damamen1 Год назад +10

    I love the idea and the wonderful schools they can build with unused plastic. The kids deserve an education. Don't we all deserve to learn? My only question is how long would it take for a school or even a frame to break down and decompose? Is it ultimately safer for the environment?

    • @blitzwolfer4154
      @blitzwolfer4154 Год назад +2

      I hope you know it takes forever for plastics to break down.

  • @Mr.Rolandthorne
    @Mr.Rolandthorne Год назад +1

    Great idea but it seems we forget that plastic breaks down over time, creating micro plastics that stay with you for life. I'm curious as to what the medical cost will be in the future. I think we are only creating a more detrimental problem down the line.

  • @funded-yl6wg
    @funded-yl6wg Год назад +1

    I wish I could like this video more than once 👍👍

  • @joggininjanuary
    @joggininjanuary Год назад +1

    when i see commercials on tv in america all the blacks are the smartest and most productive people in the world , what about the ivory coast? they should be feeding the world with all those intelligent blacks

  • @DIN_NER
    @DIN_NER Год назад

    Let's get this everywhere in the world! If it breaks melt it down and rebuild it. I feel like this is what we should have been doing with plastic.

  • @SilverSibeMetals
    @SilverSibeMetals 4 месяца назад

    This is awesome! Thank you for being part of the world's solution and doing so with great pride.

  • @scottecooke
    @scottecooke Год назад +3

    I quite like this idea. I just think they need to make sure to add UV stabilizers to the mix. As well as make sure all the buildings are painted. This will protect them against the sun and stop them from becoming brittle and breaking down. Leaving them unpainted will allow micro plastics to fall off and blow around everywhere as the sun degrades it over time. Painting will also mean the building will last longer.
    If possible, a fire-retardant paint as it is a school.

  • @ephophase3821
    @ephophase3821 Год назад +1

    I’m from Ghana 🇬🇭 and I would like get in touch with the company ❤

  • @arthurkuntz1525
    @arthurkuntz1525 Год назад +1

    THE BEST EDUCATION THAT WE CAN GET IS TO STOP OVERPOPULATING THIS WORLD AND DESTROYING IT COMMON SENSE PLEASE

  • @yusufmirza1757
    @yusufmirza1757 Год назад

    Nice ideas..no painting no expiring wall life ..👍

  • @gangisspawn1
    @gangisspawn1 Год назад +3

    8c a pound for raw plastic, $8 for 100lbs. That's $2 more than the price of recycling steel here in the US($6/100lb). Damn.

  • @tomholroyd7519
    @tomholroyd7519 Год назад +6

    Somebody can probably help with the non-uniformity of the columns

  • @MisterSiga
    @MisterSiga Год назад +5

    wow really really impressive, they really do end up looking like proper sturdy bricks !

  • @waedidmyhandlechange
    @waedidmyhandlechange Год назад +2

    On the other end of the spectrum...
    "See?! Shipping our trash to other countries benefits them! We're helping!" the western nations say as they pat themselves on the back.
    But good on this community for being able to provide jobs and create something useful.

  • @sassycat4157
    @sassycat4157 Год назад

    we need to be doing this globally.

  • @crisculaway461
    @crisculaway461 Год назад

    This is a timeless plastic waste solution. Amazing!