In the first video he mentions "air-crete" which is cement with foam instead of sand/gravel aggregate. It is another very interesting concept but like he says it's a lot more work. The results are still impressive and much better on safety, thermal & acoustic properties than wood frame architecture.
https://www.domegaia.com/
In the first video he mentions "air-crete" which is cement with foam instead of sand/gravel aggregate. It is another very interesting concept but like he says it's a lot more work. The results are still impressive and much better on safety, thermal & acoustic properties than wood frame architecture.
There are significant compression strength differences but 2 story buildings have been made with it. I wouldn't go past one floor with it but some better engineers are safely up to 2 stories. I really like this "wash & wear" approach. Much simpler to build.
In the first video he mentions "air-crete" which is cement with foam instead of sand/gravel aggregate. It is another very interesting concept but like he says it's a lot more work. The results are still impressive and much better on safety, thermal & acoustic properties than wood frame architecture.
https://www.domegaia.com/
I suspect we will see some air crete and some not. I'd be curious to find out stats on the differences.
There are significant compression strength differences but 2 story buildings have been made with it. I wouldn't go past one floor with it but some better engineers are safely up to 2 stories. I really like this "wash & wear" approach. Much simpler to build.