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    Spray-on concrete.


    “Spray-on homes” invented

    Technology may help the poor, its developers say

    Posted December 26, 2004
    Courtesy Argonne National Laboratory
    and World Science staff

    Researchers say they have found a way to build cheap, sturdy homes in one day by spraying a quick-drying ceramic onto flimsy frames. The technology could help the world’s poor, of which the United Nations estimates there are 1.3 billion, they say.

    Creating a home of Grancrete. (courtesy Argonne National Laboratory)

    Scientists at Argonne National Laboratory, a U.S. government facility in Argonne, Illinois, and Casa Grande LLC, a Mechanicsville, Virginia-based company, developed the technology. They say they will make it available worldwide after testing whether the homes are earthquake and hurricane resistant.

    The ceramic is called Grancrete. The researchers say that when sprayed onto a crude frame made of Styrofoam, Grancrete dries to form a light, hard surface. This creates a dwelling much better than the flimsy structures in which many poor people live.

    Grancrete is based on an Argonne-developed material called Ceramicrete, developed in 1996 to encase nuclear waste, according to Argonne’s Explorer Magazine. Ceramicrete thus prevents pollutants from leaking into the environment, the magazine reported. Grancrete also netted its developers an award from R&D Magazine as one of the “100 most technologically significant new products” of 2004.

    Casa Grande president Jim Paul told Explorer that his company became involved with the technology because initially, it was was looking for a concrete substitute for American industry. The need arose because concrete erodes in acidic conditions. “But as I traveled in Venezuela, I recognized the demand for cheap housing, and I thought about how to use our material for that,” he told the magazine.

    Paul then collaborated with Argonne’s Arun Wagh to create Grancrete.

    Grancrete is stronger than concrete, is fire resistant and withstands both tropical and below-freezing temperatures, the developers said; it keeps homes in arid regions cool, and those in frigid regions warm.

    To build a home, Grancrete is sprayed onto Styrofoam walls, to which it adheres and dries, according to the developers. The Styrofoam remains in place as an effective insulator, although Wagh suggests simpler walls, such as woven fiber mats, also would work well and further reduce the raw materials required.

    Using Grancrete in developing countries has additional advantages, says Wagh.

    “When you build houses in these poor villages, the materials you use should be indigenous, and the labor should be indigenous,” he told the magazine. “Every village has soil and ash, and the labor and training requirements are so minimal that two local people can build a house in two days.”

    Workers only need two days of training to learn how to operate the machinery, Paul told the publication. Casa Grande typically assembles a team of five people who can start in the morning and create a home that residents can move into that evening, he asserted. The material dries in minutes, he added, whereas concrete can take hours or days.

    Grancrete is made from an environmentally friendly mix of locally available chemicals, according to the developers. It consists of sand or sandy soil, ash, magnesium oxide and potassium phosphate, which is a biodegradable element in fertilizer. So even if Grancrete were to decompose, Wagh told the magazine, it would revitalize the soil.

    It costs about $6,000 U.S. dollars to build a Grancrete home, Paul told Explorer, several times cheaper than a conventionally built home. The homes are more than four simple walls, the developers added; for less than $10,000 U.S., laborers can produce Grancrete dwellings twice of 800 square feet, twice the size of a typical apartment in Bombay, India.

    Wagh’s said he aims to see Grancrete used throughout his native India and the world to produce housing for the poor.

    Born in the Indian state of Karnataka, Wagh grew up in a neighborhood where even to this day the homes have walls and ceilings made from knitted mats of palm leaves, and the floors are made of dried cow dung, according to Explorer magazine.

    “These homes are regularly subjected to hundreds of inches of monsoon rains and cyclone winds and therefore often have to be repaired or even entirely rebuilt,” Wagh told the publication. “Obviously such conditions can have a great impact on the health, well-being, and longevity of the children and adults living there.”

    The spray-on cement now offers hundreds of millions of people such as these the opportunity to have adequate housing and live longer, healthier lives, he told the publication.

    Argonne and Casa Grande have extensively tested Grancrete for structural properties, post-application behavior and production costs, the developers said. Their next step will be to test it for earthquake and hurricane resistance, after which they will make the product available worldwide. Wagh hopes the United Nations and other international organizations will subsidize mass-scale production around the world.
    Exult in your existence, because that very process has blundered unwittingly on its own negation. Only a small, local negation, to be sure: only one species, and only a minority of that species; but there lies hope. [...] Stand tall, Bipedal Ape. The shark may outswim you, the cheetah outrun you, the swift outfly you, the capuchin outclimb you, the elephant outpower you, the redwood outlast you. But you have the biggest gifts of all: the gift of understanding the ruthlessly cruel process that gave us all existence [and the] gift of revulsion against its implications.
    -Richard Dawkins

  • #2
    Grancrete?
    Speaking of Erith:

    "It's not twinned with anywhere, but it does have a suicide pact with Dagenham" - Linda Smith

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    • #3
      Spray on concrete has been around for a while, how does this differ from the existing?
      Visit First Cultural Industries
      There are reasons why I believe mankind should live in cities and let nature reclaim all the villages with the exception of a few we keep on display as horrific reminders of rural life.-Starchild
      Meat eating and the dominance and force projected over animals that is acompanies it is a gateway or parallel to other prejudiced beliefs such as classism, misogyny, and even racism. -General Ludd

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      • #4
        It's used to encase nuclear waste - I would assume that it is impervious to moisture, something normal concrete only gains with additives, and even then not necessarily. Plus, reading between the lines, it may be much stronger structurally.
        The worst form of insubordination is being right - Keith D., marine veteran. A dictator will starve to the last civilian - self-quoted
        And on the eigth day, God realized it was Monday, and created caffeine. And behold, it was very good. - self-quoted
        Klaatu: I'm impatient with stupidity. My people have learned to live without it.
        Mr. Harley: I'm afraid my people haven't. I'm very sorry… I wish it were otherwise.

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        • #5
          This building method won't work for one simple reason. $6000 is ten years wages for an African who makes $600. He isn't in the cash economy or at least is marginally in the cash economy so he has no access to credit.

          How does he come up with 10 years wages? Anwer: He doesn't.
          Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

          Comment


          • #6
            No, but countries and charities can come up with that kind of money.
            Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

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            • #7
              Originally posted by chegitz guevara
              No, but countries and charities can come up with that kind of money.
              Yeah, and I wonder where this 6,000 figure is coming from too. It might cost 6,000 dollars to construct one of these homes in the US. But that would mean it would cost much much much less to build the same home somewhere else in the world.

              And still, $6,000 is pennies compared to the budgets these international development agencies have.

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              • #8
                $6000 isn't much at all

                the thing is, do they want to live in an ugly concrete home?

                I guess it beats living in the mud.

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                • #9
                  Helping the world's poor
                  Living in a house instead of a flimsy, shanty 'dwelling'

                  Maybe some of Gordon Browns money can go on this

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                  • #10
                    I suppose the homes could be shared between a large family of Africans; combined with aid, they could probably afford one.

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                    • #11
                      Why would someone want "Grancrete" when cow dung or mud is readily available?
                      Rethink Refuse Reduce Reuse

                      Do It Ourselves

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by General Ludd
                        Why would someone want "Grancrete" when cow dung or mud is readily available?
                        Why would someone want cow dung or mud if "Grancrete" is available

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Zulu Elephant


                          Why would someone want cow dung or mud if "Grancrete" is available
                          Because it's cheaper and better. Who wants to live in a ****ing concrete house? Those are usually called prisons.
                          Rethink Refuse Reduce Reuse

                          Do It Ourselves

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                          • #14
                            And mud and dung houses are often rightly called utter sh*tholes.
                            Safer worlds through superior firepower

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by General Ludd


                              Because it's cheaper and better. Who wants to live in a ****ing concrete house? Those are usually called prisons.
                              At some point the economies of those regions where people live in mud/dung houses will reach a level at which a better standard of housing is required and demanded. If Grancrete is as good as the article suggests, it may provide a halfway house for regions with economies that need more than mud huts but still cant afford western construction

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