Hello,
Recently, I read this text and the life cycle assessment of a precast concrete house by Dr. Hans-Dieter Bottke, and I really liked both. What I find particularly interesting is the affordable price combined with durability and the passive house standard.
What are your thoughts on this?
Best regards,
Bottikowski
Recently, I read this text and the life cycle assessment of a precast concrete house by Dr. Hans-Dieter Bottke, and I really liked both. What I find particularly interesting is the affordable price combined with durability and the passive house standard.
What are your thoughts on this?
Best regards,
Bottikowski
P
PeterHawaii11 Jul 2017 14:09I find the idea personally very interesting – are there already any pilot projects or references?
Best regards
Best regards
haydee schrieb:
In my opinion, this is an unrealistic project. Is there already a concrete plant willing to take it on? No, they share the same opinion. From a production technology standpoint, it just won’t work.
haydee schrieb:
How will water, electricity, and ventilation systems be installed? Surface-mounted or embedded in concrete, or will there be a stud wall in front? Don’t confuse intellectuals with trivial considerations; these are not construction technicians. In this particular case, it’s about solving the world’s problems.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
1) It is a 10 by 10 box with a flat roof on an existing slab foundation, without any interior finish or systems, to be built as masonry for 57.
2) The living environment in a masonry house is better; you can easily put a nail in the wall and have concealed drainage.
3) It only makes sense if the concrete plant produces 20 to 30 units at once.
4) I don’t see a market for this pigsty aesthetic or any real cost advantage.
5) Our shell construction measured 13.5 by 10 meters (44 by 33 feet) with foundation, roofing, windows, doors, and gutters, built in Ytong blocks with plaster, Braas roof tiles, and a roof truss made with Studiobinder 73. Karsten
2) The living environment in a masonry house is better; you can easily put a nail in the wall and have concealed drainage.
3) It only makes sense if the concrete plant produces 20 to 30 units at once.
4) I don’t see a market for this pigsty aesthetic or any real cost advantage.
5) Our shell construction measured 13.5 by 10 meters (44 by 33 feet) with foundation, roofing, windows, doors, and gutters, built in Ytong blocks with plaster, Braas roof tiles, and a roof truss made with Studiobinder 73. Karsten
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