I lived in a 100 year old tiny house which had saw dust insulation. It sucked because the sawdust always settles and compacts. Slowly, the upper portion of the wall lose any R value. By the time I was living there, the insulation was only in the bottom two feet of the walls.
This technique doesn't work well when tree limbs break off and stick through the epoxy paint, then into the foam. Water will work its way through the foam and cause damage to the house. Now, spraying foam on the inside of the house will keep the heat outside with no leaks. Don't spray foam on the outside, because you'll regret it. Plus, once sprayed on the outside of the house, it's almost impossible to remove the foam without destroying the outside of your house. A friend of mine is regretting it because ant's love to nest inside this foam. Any leaks at all, your house will be like a sponge, and termites will eat at your house, from the inside out! This will cost you about 6 thousand dollars to spray! Not worth the aggravation,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This is the biggest and worst crap you can imagine to use in building a house. Hard to remove, actually you can tear down the whole house since the whole crap is special waste... probably it makes you sick over the years releasing chemical gases.
No quello che dici non è vero. La mia casa è stata realizzata con tecniche simili 45 anni fa e ci si vive benissimo. Quello che mi meraviglia è che questa sia presentata come una tecnica innovativa
Thanks so much for the video! 🌟 I can't believe how effective this technology is. 😲 I'm curious what other modern machines are being used in construction? 🤔🔧
Watch as this genius technique revolutionizes how buildings are made-faster, smarter, and stronger than ever before. Could this be the future of construction?
Many of these ideas are ok, but, would never pass regulations in the USA.. The all wood block home wouldn't last a year in Florida or Texas, as the termites would have one hell of a feast on it. The exposed plastic blocks would never pass fire codes. Same for the recycled plastic blocks..
@russbell6418 This is actually so untrue foam board provides a super low insulating factor... WAY better to go with fiber like insulation or even old school fiberglass. Look up the values you will see foam board is super low. So yeah not even remotely true...
You do know that all wood will burn right? LMAO and many of the ones you speak of that are more termite proof they burn and also then are a hazard as they burn lol so you have many sides of why it is a bad idea to fill voids with chips of flammable materials lol
Making pre-fabricated concrete elements make real sense, especially for basement construction because it is much easier to produce such elements horizontally than it is to construct them vertically on the building site..👍👍👍
8:16..This is basically the same as stamping a concrete driveway or sidewalk. The powder he peppered on the stamp is a release agent so the stamp doesnt stick to the plaster like material. 🙏❤😊
Actually, nothing good about hardly any of these ideas, they're glued together with hopes n dreams, then there is the toxi plastics and such that will burn rapidly but worse put off a super nasty black toxic smoke. These are all HORRIBLE ideas lol
Eu Amo a Engª Civil Americana... é surpreendente mesmo! Desde as opções as ferramentas usadas... é bárbaro! Meu sonho de consumo, creio que de muitos brasileiros!
You lost me at 1:17. Caulking or foaming a seam in a foundation? I haven’t seen any caulk or foam that lasts all that long, especially in a foundation. It looks like nothing more than a way to make foundation repairs a rapidly recurring business.
3:55 As they stack the blocks, you can see the others squish down.... Theres no way that could be load bearing.. can't even bear its own weight... wall will probably sag even without a load.
byfusion - the Australian outback house you want to be during a bushfire, eco-spray therm - is air tightness a benefit if the foam start outgassing? brikawood - the termite fest.
@@keithfulkerson There were other interesting Builds... But I was looking at building a Spray Foam Building... 43 years Auto-Body and 10 years spraying foam on the side :)
Очень интересная техника в строительстве. Хотелось бы узнать проводились ли исследования как эта вся технология влияет на самого человека, на дыхание, на само тело. Какие могут быть последствия для жизни в таких квартирах и домах. Спасибо.
I think recycling unsortable/unrecyclable plastics (which we have a crap ton of) into bricks like these are a good way to sequester these materials en-masse. We need a stable place to put them, so why not buildings? They probably need a fire-retardant coating that also works as a sealer for any long-term offgassing issues and an UV blocker since that is one of the main things that eventually break down plastics, but otherwise it is both strong and light, can't rot, degrade or seep water. It would be a good insulator, and the very low thermal expansion is a pretty big benefit also. May as well press them into "lego" bricks while you are at it to make bricklaying stupidly easy with a rubber mallet/sledge. If you make an indent in the shape for a spreader tool they would be reusable - which is a good idea for bricks that might realistically last hundreds of years. (yes Lego company, you can steal this idea for your own bricks so we can finally manage to pull the damn things apart lol). Same idea applies to sequestering compressed carbon in the future from industrial filtering, and hopefully drawn from the air if we can find more cost-effective methods. Sending it down into mines or deep into the ocean floor is unrealistically expensive for the volumes we are talking about. If you can encase blocks of pure compressed carbon into building materials (like in the core of plastic bricks) Then we would have a relatively controlled environment for it and absorb some of the cost by making something that has value. Carbon also has some good material characteristics. We would necessarily need to be better about deconstructing buildings in the future rather than just smashing them, but if many components were made to be disassembled and reused then it would not only be easier, but also cover much of the labor cost.
There are more vacant houses than homeless people. Homelessness, like under employment, addiction, domestic violence, and or country's abject refusal to treat mental illness, are all policy driven, not derived from a lack of resources, but political will. When we stop subsidizing industry and religion, we might just get a handle on treating people like people.
@paradoxworkshop46 Why is *"homelessness policy driven?"* Do you disagree that providing oneself with shelter is the responsibility of the *individual?* No one handed *ME* and my family a *FREE HOME.* I had to *EARN* our shelter. It's otherwise known as *providing for your OWN SURVIVAL.* 🤦
bricklike substance, plastics with adhesive and more soft plastics with glues and synthetic materials. would it be possible to just use the materials we have found usable, durable and safe?
Wonder if some of this techniques are available in Australia or can buy and transport to Oz the roof cement for example ? Had issues liking this video suggest reference RUclips.
A simple infusion of sodabicarbonate and borax would make the wood shavings highly fire resistant ,rot resistant, insect resistant and rodent resistant. The one thing I see a problem with is settling /shrinkage how can that be resolved
Off gassing of plastics plywood is a health detriment - even new carpet formaldehyde - I got sick working in an office newly carpeted - the old ways are generally better - everything has a "life" and we see VERY old structures still standing the tests of time and weather
99% of these will disappear for many reasons, you see new ' game changing ' material and concepts all the time, most not feasible, practical, cost effective or long lasting.
Years ago, I helped a friend demo an old, dusty farmhouse that he took 1/2 a decade to re-finish. I couldn't believe what a MESS it was between the walls. I had the idea of created a home using modular parts and was laughed at by not only him, but my uncle who was in construction. And here we are. I shoulda patented some of my ideas. 😮💨
I've been in Residential, Commercial & Industrial construction for about 55 years, how is it that I've never seen any of these products or building systems in real world practice.
I’ve just restored a 3/4 million townhouse new build in 2017 spray foam every where , roof space , cavities etc all soaking wet holding water against osb , moisture rotting the house , mold , wet blown insulation , hvac system full of mold due to increased moisture within property spores growing , I wouldn’t use spray foam if my life depended on it !! Told the client to sell the property ASAP , the issue will never be resolved . Built by a big box developer as well ..
Wall panels are called PIR/PUR they have been used in construction for nearly 100 years and most big-box stores are built this way. They are not used for single family homes, because they don't adapt well to more complex designs and all of the machinery to install them would cost more than block-laying/wood frame on a small scale. Hydrofoam is just eps floor insulation (literally every single family home needs this insulation nowadays) that has bumps for floor heating pipes. No one ever needed this, flat panels are fine and probably cheaper. Brick cladding is pretty much how every single house that has been insulated from the outside achieves "brick look". That's because every single house you make out of bricks gets 30cm of eps on the outside, so they don't look very nice. Fusion blocks isn't used. It's probably more expensive and a fire hazard. Probably isn't very strong either, might degrade, might be inconsistent. Probably not much thermal mass. Probably doesn't stand up to wind. Probably expensive. Prefabricated monolithic floor. These are extremely common and have been used for ages. Spray insulation. Very common. It's called PUR. It has higher thermal resistance than mineral wool or EPS. For about 3 years, you get get the house certified as A++, later it goes down to the same thermal resistivity as EPS. Comparison I think you need about 20cm of PUR or 30cm of EPS. So you have A++ energy efficiency for about 3 years, then it goes to A/A+. Brick of wood. Never seen it. Sales pitch should be: "Are you tired of simply screwing OSB panels? Well, you're in luck, now you can spend 10 times more time for a worse result!".
I like the Bricka-Block as it uses wood joining channels & all the shavings from cutting those channels are used as the insulation in the walls. Homes that are "Tight" can't expel the toxins from the dwelling leaving them inside and you breathe them. Some cool, kool, and kewl stuff here.......... peace
" Why is that?" Long ago as a trainee, I asked the same question, all the new products from Europe we learned in school but never use???? The owner a P.E. said, "Because I put my name on the drawings. and much of this stuff is not proven." Look at the early history of PEX without the oxygen barrier, Tubetron, EDPM, polybutylene ... used in hydronic heating systems. Some of it worked and some, not so much. Do you want to be the guy with your name on the drawing? You may have to eat it.
@@jerrebrasfield4231 Got that right. At More than Double or even Triple the Costs it adds to building a house.. You are the first one I seen that said this.
I always cringe at the "air tight" plastic insulation innovations which make your home a closed bottle system. Trouble with air circulation (co2) and especially with air humidity. Humidity changes to liquid water easily when in contact with plastic surfaces in certain temperatures. Water drops inside your walls call for mold. Mold produces toxins that eventually get in your lungs. The breathability of a building's structures is an important factor for their longevity and healthiness.
I grew up with greenhouses. They were always damp and moldy. I just can't see how having a house inside of one could be healthy. While they smell good, I think it would be too much moisture to put your house in. It just looks like it would grow mold everywhere, including places that you don't see, like in the walls and the vents and such.
Wenn die Mauern miteinander verbunden sind und es keine Undichtigkeiten gibt, sollte es funktionieren. Auf alle Fälle ist es eine Überlegung wert und vielleicht ausbaufähig. Alle Materialien die feuchtigkeits- oder wasserresistent sein müssen, sollten dies natürlich auch sein. Aber trotzdem müssen die Wände und Decken atmungsaktiv sein sonst ist Schimmel vorprogrammiert.
bei 3:23 sehe ich sowas wie fasern (fiber) könnte durch verwitterungen zu faserflug und lunkenkrebserkrankungen der gesammten umliegenden orte führen, jegliche faserstoffe sollte man bestmöglich meiden!!!! beste grüße
Isn’t the plastic bottles toxic? Just saying, that’s why you don’t reheat in them! If that’s the case when temperature heat up there goes breathing toxic air.
What about all The cemicals these material contain - Smart is not always better 😊
I was saying the same thing to myself, all the way through the video...
Like the formaldehyde in treated wood?
@@LisaMitchell-f8e Or all the horrible chemicals used to treat the inside of vehicles. Maybe horses will make a come back....
@@markseamans4682 I could live with that.
Brickawood looks like a highly flammable construction method, with wood insulated by wood shavings.
Yeah, and an R value of 1.4 per inch of wood, and a termite haven. No thanks
I lived in a 100 year old tiny house which had saw dust insulation. It sucked because the sawdust always settles and compacts. Slowly, the upper portion of the wall lose any R value. By the time I was living there, the insulation was only in the bottom two feet of the walls.
@@michellemybelle007same here.
@@michellemybelle007 So it can't burn anymore, right?
mice haven.
I’d like to see the fire resistance testing for all of this stuff…
Очень вредные материалы
Yep I’ve seen a few of these all look great til you ask the question of fire (and the resulting toxicity of smoke)
Seems like they possibly didn't take that into consideration.
This technique doesn't work well when tree limbs break off and stick through the epoxy paint, then into the foam. Water will work its way through the foam and cause damage to the house. Now, spraying foam on the inside of the house will keep the heat outside with no leaks. Don't spray foam on the outside, because you'll regret it. Plus, once sprayed on the outside of the house, it's almost impossible to remove the foam without destroying the outside of your house. A friend of mine is regretting it because ant's love to nest inside this foam. Any leaks at all, your house will be like a sponge, and termites will eat at your house, from the inside out! This will cost you about 6 thousand dollars to spray! Not worth the aggravation,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Insulation foam is very different from concrete foam that sets hard. They have even been used to raise houses that have sunked a little.
Plus that spray burns like crazy in a fire.
It's funny that that people invest their effort time and money in to something that is purely visible that not going to work.
It's worked for years. This isn't new. Everything calls for maintenance and upkeep. Termites wreak havoc on a wood house, so does fire.
Closed cell foams don’t absorb water.
Nothing like hearing an Artificially Intelligent voiceover on a story of construction technologies that are mostly prohibited in the USA.
And for good reason.
@@Jade7073 And Canada. So much for UL, ULC, tested assemblies and Building Codes. Don't fall for crapola videos like this.
Prohibited because they're garbage(literally)..... There's a reason modern construction is laughable poor.
I think these ideas are great!!! Go for it.😮😊
This is the biggest and worst crap you can imagine to use in building a house. Hard to remove, actually you can tear down the whole house since the whole crap is special waste... probably it makes you sick over the years releasing chemical gases.
NAAANIIIEEE!!!????? Building a home out of other peoples trash may make my house a pile of garbage?
@@zarthemad8386 I don't understand what you want to say, maybe start over and explain it in a different way. Where did I say something about trash???
Máš pravdu není na normální matrial❤
Then stop eating US processed crap.
No quello che dici non è vero. La mia casa è stata realizzata con tecniche simili 45 anni fa e ci si vive benissimo. Quello che mi meraviglia è che questa sia presentata come una tecnica innovativa
Let's see a fire test with plastic melted blocks.😅😅
not to mention the house insulated with wood chips...
What chemicals would be released when the plastic bricks burned? You would die from smoke inhalation long before the melted plastic got to you.
Lol
The plastic would off gas over time too. Nothing "environmentally friendly" about living in a plastic filled home.
Oder die chemischen Ausdünstungen. Das funktioniert auf Dauer nicht
Mice love this material, easy to burrow in.
When you decide you've haven't had enough micro plastics in your life...
Sto procent racji👍
Workers are really good at this.😍😍
My house is 100 years old - and looks great. Lets check these places in 100 years.
Génial, très ingénieux, si j'avais les sous, je ferais construire, merci.
Thanks so much for the video! 🌟 I can't believe how effective this technology is. 😲 I'm curious what other modern machines are being used in construction? 🤔🔧
It is good to know many different systems and materials. Nice video!
Dear Sue and Andras, nice weather, smooth sailing on Adria, thanks for sharing!
Watch as this genius technique revolutionizes how buildings are made-faster, smarter, and stronger than ever before. Could this be the future of construction?
And materials are more flammable
Excellent innovation.
Nice video, I enjoyed it.
I THINK SO, TOO
Many of these ideas are ok, but, would never pass regulations in the USA.. The all wood block home wouldn't last a year in Florida or Texas, as the termites would have one hell of a feast on it. The exposed plastic blocks would never pass fire codes. Same for the recycled plastic blocks..
There already in Illinois for years now. The heating and cooling bills are fractional.
You do know that there are several species of wood that termites won't chew up, right???
Not to even get into pressure treated woods, one of the chemicals it is treated with is a pesticide. I mean fuck, are you uneducated? Or ignorant?
@russbell6418 This is actually so untrue foam board provides a super low insulating factor... WAY better to go with fiber like insulation or even old school fiberglass. Look up the values you will see foam board is super low. So yeah not even remotely true...
You do know that all wood will burn right? LMAO and many of the ones you speak of that are more termite proof they burn and also then are a hazard as they burn lol so you have many sides of why it is a bad idea to fill voids with chips of flammable materials lol
Making pre-fabricated concrete elements make real sense, especially for basement construction because it is much easier to produce such elements horizontally than it is to construct them vertically on the building site..👍👍👍
8:16..This is basically the same as stamping a concrete driveway or sidewalk. The powder he peppered on the stamp is a release agent so the stamp doesnt stick to the plaster like material. 🙏❤😊
Awesome ideas and creative ways to use materials
Actually, nothing good about hardly any of these ideas, they're glued together with hopes n dreams, then there is the toxi plastics and such that will burn rapidly but worse put off a super nasty black toxic smoke. These are all HORRIBLE ideas lol
7:45 Если внутри стен такого дома поселятся мыши то их уже ничем оттуда не выгонишь, а после смерти каждой в доме появится несносный запах.
Обычная засыпнуха.
Eu Amo a Engª Civil Americana... é surpreendente mesmo!
Desde as opções as ferramentas usadas... é bárbaro!
Meu sonho de consumo, creio que de muitos brasileiros!
Very cool 😎
Your explanations are so vivid and easy to understand! Could you make a video about eco-friendly production processes?
درودعالی دمت گرم کوکا ممنون ازراهنمایتون ❤❤❤❤
things are getting simpler. So convenient
Mm. Plastic bricks. Oh yeah. Thats gunna be so much fun for everyone if there's a fire. Super easy to put out and barely any toxic, black smoke.😅
Incredible
You lost me at 1:17. Caulking or foaming a seam in a foundation? I haven’t seen any caulk or foam that lasts all that long, especially in a foundation. It looks like nothing more than a way to make foundation repairs a rapidly recurring business.
3:55 As they stack the blocks, you can see the others squish down.... Theres no way that could be load bearing.. can't even bear its own weight... wall will probably sag even without a load.
byfusion - the Australian outback house you want to be during a bushfire,
eco-spray therm - is air tightness a benefit if the foam start outgassing?
brikawood - the termite fest.
Where’s the thumb nail being made ??? That’s why I watched the video waiting for nothing
Thanks for the warning.
@@keithfulkerson There were other interesting Builds... But I was looking at building a Spray Foam Building... 43 years Auto-Body and 10 years spraying foam on the side :)
Очень интересная техника в строительстве. Хотелось бы узнать проводились ли исследования как эта вся технология влияет на самого человека, на дыхание, на само тело. Какие могут быть последствия для жизни в таких квартирах и домах. Спасибо.
I think recycling unsortable/unrecyclable plastics (which we have a crap ton of) into bricks like these are a good way to sequester these materials en-masse. We need a stable place to put them, so why not buildings? They probably need a fire-retardant coating that also works as a sealer for any long-term offgassing issues and an UV blocker since that is one of the main things that eventually break down plastics, but otherwise it is both strong and light, can't rot, degrade or seep water. It would be a good insulator, and the very low thermal expansion is a pretty big benefit also. May as well press them into "lego" bricks while you are at it to make bricklaying stupidly easy with a rubber mallet/sledge. If you make an indent in the shape for a spreader tool they would be reusable - which is a good idea for bricks that might realistically last hundreds of years. (yes Lego company, you can steal this idea for your own bricks so we can finally manage to pull the damn things apart lol).
Same idea applies to sequestering compressed carbon in the future from industrial filtering, and hopefully drawn from the air if we can find more cost-effective methods. Sending it down into mines or deep into the ocean floor is unrealistically expensive for the volumes we are talking about. If you can encase blocks of pure compressed carbon into building materials (like in the core of plastic bricks) Then we would have a relatively controlled environment for it and absorb some of the cost by making something that has value. Carbon also has some good material characteristics. We would necessarily need to be better about deconstructing buildings in the future rather than just smashing them, but if many components were made to be disassembled and reused then it would not only be easier, but also cover much of the labor cost.
Okay so everything is better, everything is easier, on, and on, and on, GREAT!
Now why so many people still homeless?
What are you talking about? This houses cost more than a regular one. It's not for the poor people.
There are more vacant houses than homeless people.
Homelessness, like under employment, addiction, domestic violence, and or country's abject refusal to treat mental illness, are all policy driven, not derived from a lack of resources, but political will.
When we stop subsidizing industry and religion, we might just get a handle on treating people like people.
@paradoxworkshop46
Why is *"homelessness policy driven?"* Do you disagree that providing oneself with shelter is the responsibility of the *individual?* No one handed *ME* and my family a *FREE HOME.* I had to *EARN* our shelter. It's otherwise known as *providing for your OWN SURVIVAL.* 🤦
Why? Because they have not grown into adulthood and accepted that they need to provide shelter for themselves.
@@rattlecat5968 some people lack the abilities you have, just like you lack the ability to understand that.
Don't you think there is too much chemicals in the walls and floors ?
With all respect for TRUTH and KNOWLEDGE
bricklike substance, plastics with adhesive and more soft plastics with glues and synthetic materials. would it be possible to just use the materials we have found usable, durable and safe?
all those modern materials are nice and good, but no way they are gonna last for centuries like traditional construction
Gratidão ❤❤❤❤
I like the monolithic floor idea.
these buildings look sick!
😐
Wonder if some of this techniques are available in Australia or can buy and transport to Oz the roof cement for example ? Had issues liking this video suggest reference RUclips.
nice🎉🎉
for brikawood...... yeaaaaah so lets take our all wood frame and fill it with ultra flammable wood shavings!!! awesome!!!!!
A simple infusion of sodabicarbonate and borax would make the wood shavings highly fire resistant ,rot resistant, insect resistant and rodent resistant. The one thing I see a problem with is settling /shrinkage how can that be resolved
Off gassing of plastics plywood is a health detriment - even new carpet formaldehyde - I got sick working in an office newly carpeted - the old ways are generally better - everything has a "life" and we see VERY old structures still standing the tests of time and weather
99% of these will disappear for many reasons, you see new ' game changing ' material and concepts all the time, most not feasible, practical, cost effective or long lasting.
This video is truly captivating, every moment is amazing! Could you share more about the preparation process before starting production?
I THINK SO, TOO
Years ago, I helped a friend demo an old, dusty farmhouse that he took 1/2 a decade to re-finish. I couldn't believe what a MESS it was between the walls. I had the idea of created a home using modular parts and was laughed at by not only him, but my uncle who was in construction. And here we are. I shoulda patented some of my ideas. 😮💨
We were using this foam in our piggerys ..... mice and insects love it ..... its a real pain cutting it out and redoing it each year.
Fast and cheap are not the words i want to hear when describing how my house was built.
Wow. That was pretty cool.
Trust me all materials are sure as healthy as fresh and clean air.
And for the first couple of years.
I've been in Residential, Commercial & Industrial construction for about 55 years, how is it that I've never seen any of these products or building systems in real world practice.
How long will these 'modern' materials last when subject to weathering ? Not long.
I would rather live in my wooden log home and be healthy.
Mega!
Sowas macht spass
All these years and nobody come up with a better way to caulk yet
I’ve just restored a 3/4 million townhouse new build in 2017 spray foam every where , roof space , cavities etc all soaking wet holding water against osb , moisture rotting the house , mold , wet blown insulation , hvac system full of mold due to increased moisture within property spores growing , I wouldn’t use spray foam if my life depended on it !! Told the client to sell the property ASAP , the issue will never be resolved . Built by a big box developer as well ..
3:59 this can be done with a mixture of sand, to get a better building material for less cost.
Hemp! ❤
Wall panels are called PIR/PUR they have been used in construction for nearly 100 years and most big-box stores are built this way. They are not used for single family homes, because they don't adapt well to more complex designs and all of the machinery to install them would cost more than block-laying/wood frame on a small scale.
Hydrofoam is just eps floor insulation (literally every single family home needs this insulation nowadays) that has bumps for floor heating pipes. No one ever needed this, flat panels are fine and probably cheaper.
Brick cladding is pretty much how every single house that has been insulated from the outside achieves "brick look". That's because every single house you make out of bricks gets 30cm of eps on the outside, so they don't look very nice.
Fusion blocks isn't used. It's probably more expensive and a fire hazard. Probably isn't very strong either, might degrade, might be inconsistent. Probably not much thermal mass. Probably doesn't stand up to wind. Probably expensive.
Prefabricated monolithic floor. These are extremely common and have been used for ages.
Spray insulation. Very common. It's called PUR. It has higher thermal resistance than mineral wool or EPS. For about 3 years, you get get the house certified as A++, later it goes down to the same thermal resistivity as EPS. Comparison I think you need about 20cm of PUR or 30cm of EPS. So you have A++ energy efficiency for about 3 years, then it goes to A/A+.
Brick of wood. Never seen it. Sales pitch should be: "Are you tired of simply screwing OSB panels? Well, you're in luck, now you can spend 10 times more time for a worse result!".
the thumb promised a new system but i only see spray foam and the video didn't reflect the thumbnail.. :(
with all this money saving innovations ... WHY ARE HOME COSTS GOING UP!
Are those plastic bricks fireproof?
Just wonder if any of these methods and materials are used ANYWHERE in the US.
I like the Bricka-Block as it uses wood joining channels & all the shavings from cutting those channels are used as
the insulation in the walls. Homes that are "Tight" can't expel the toxins from the dwelling leaving them inside and
you breathe them. Some cool, kool, and kewl stuff here.......... peace
and is a fire hazard
Yep, that's a fact so I'd not use candles.... peace
Хороший многоквартирный дом для мышей.
@@Дарья-22-и2е good point !
So many different systems and materials, yet so few ever seem to make it into volume construction projects. Why is that?
" Why is that?"
Long ago as a trainee, I asked the same question, all the new products from Europe we learned in school but never use????
The owner a P.E. said, "Because I put my name on the drawings. and much of this stuff is not proven."
Look at the early history of PEX without the oxygen barrier, Tubetron, EDPM, polybutylene ... used in hydronic heating systems.
Some of it worked and some, not so much.
Do you want to be the guy with your name on the drawing? You may have to eat it.
Cost
@@jerrebrasfield4231 Got that right. At More than Double or even Triple the Costs it adds to building a house.. You are the first one I seen that said this.
I always cringe at the "air tight" plastic insulation innovations which make your home a closed bottle system. Trouble with air circulation (co2) and especially with air humidity. Humidity changes to liquid water easily when in contact with plastic surfaces in certain temperatures. Water drops inside your walls call for mold. Mold produces toxins that eventually get in your lungs.
The breathability of a building's structures is an important factor for their longevity and healthiness.
I grew up with greenhouses. They were always damp and moldy. I just can't see how having a house inside of one could be healthy. While they smell good, I think it would be too much moisture to put your house in. It just looks like it would grow mold everywhere, including places that you don't see, like in the walls and the vents and such.
Mice love those Styrofoam panels to make tunnels through
Wenn die Mauern miteinander verbunden sind und es keine Undichtigkeiten gibt, sollte es funktionieren. Auf alle Fälle ist es eine Überlegung wert und vielleicht ausbaufähig. Alle Materialien die feuchtigkeits- oder wasserresistent sein müssen, sollten dies natürlich auch sein. Aber trotzdem müssen die Wände und Decken atmungsaktiv sein sonst ist Schimmel vorprogrammiert.
Houses of cards. After a typhoon or hurricane, all these houses will collapse.
All wooden structure filled with sawdust for insulation wouldn't that be termite paradise
I would use any combination of those materials in construction and feel good about not causing more waste
Good luck
I wouldn't want a house made of garbage but for those that are homeless, I'm sure it's better than no home at all.
No ventilation = condensation literally running down the walls as well as mould after a while
2:12 are these guys on crack? They covered a brick house with plastic , glue and fake bricks of the same colour. Absolutely baffling.
7:47 Very nice wood finnish.
bei 3:23 sehe ich sowas wie fasern (fiber) könnte durch verwitterungen zu faserflug und lunkenkrebserkrankungen der gesammten umliegenden orte führen, jegliche faserstoffe sollte man bestmöglich meiden!!!!
beste grüße
***spray*** -therm is only 👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎 dumb... # recycling !!!!!!!!
How do I buy psycablock an those wood blocks
Intoxicación por gases emanados del plastico y los demás compuestos para los acabados.
Houses have only gotten more expensive, and show me one house build today that will still be standing not in 100 years but just even in 50 years.
MEXICANS ENTERED THE CHAT
строители охреневают от удивления. Дайте, говорят, того гения, чтоб посмотреть ему в глаза
Wood shavings!? Arte they dumb? That is perfect Rodent and Roach food and nesting material!
Labor cost have skyrocketed in the past few years.
Εγώ εμπιστεύομαι μόνο το παλιό τρόπο κατασκευής. Τα σπίτια που χτίστηκαν με τούβλα ή πέτρα και λάσπη αντέχουν αιώνες και δεν βλάπουν την υγεία μας.
Buenos días y para el clima caliente como funciona
I couldn't see anywhere in the video where construction workers couldn't believe that this technique works. You must have cut that part out hey!!!
What about respiratory health ?
Plus, in a high wind situation (near tornado or hurricane) good bye home, when normal wood construction might have faired better.
and wehre ist the tubing for electricity und water ?
Micro plastics in bottled water.....imagine a home made of plastics....wouldn't that be worse?
Isn’t the plastic bottles toxic? Just saying, that’s why you don’t reheat in them! If that’s the case when temperature heat up there goes breathing toxic air.
Nothing better than putting fake brick overtop of real brick. 2:17