Love this idea. But was that phenolic insulation used in the walls.. what about offgassing? You say it’s permeable. But phenolics are not moisture permeable are they? couldn’t you use straw or hemp shiv. Or perhaps chopped miscanthus and lime ? For the insulation?
HI, Russ here from central Georgia, USA. Since in the south east USA we often experience months at a time when the temperature can be extremely hot with high humidity in the day time, I think rammed earth would not work because at night it may only cool off 10 degrees f. That means the walls will not get a chance to cool off, and the interior of the house would swelter day and night in the heat. Perhaps an outer layer of insulation and white reflective paint could be used so the rammed earth will not get as hot in the day, I wonder if that would work? Secondly, I find few materials here to make a keyhole garden with out spending a lot of money for construction materials , but I suspect a rammed earth version of this could work with reusable forms. A cement cap would be needed to keep the rain from washing away the dirt with the intensive rainfall we often get in the summer. The second challenge would be the plants inside the keyhole garden may erode the earthen walls, so some sort of protection would be needed to avoid that. If those problems could be solved, and reusable forms can be made, I think rammed earth keyhole gardens and retainer walls could be a good, inexpensive way to make some very attractive landscaping elements. Any comments?
I have 2 questions and a request about rammed house building. 1) How does construction of rammed earth homes integrate electric wiring and water/sewer plumbing especially for a 2 plus more floors? 2) Since the walls are made of earth, how do the walls survive in the shower or if rained on? 3) Is it possible to make/share a video that shows how the electric wiring and water/sewer plumbing lines are constructed and integrated into the walls? Answers to the above questions will be very helpful in deciding about rammed earth homes and help shed a light on how electricity and water will be incorporated in rammed earth building. Thank you so much for the informative information.
I want to know the same thing.. I have seen tons of rammed house construction but none of them show how to do the electric wiring and the bathroom pipes.. Please anyone who can reply 🙏
Hiya there My home burnt down and I thought I'd be rebuilding with rammed earth. I'm technically ''off grid'' so... I was wondering what type of tamper/compressor/generator would be required. So far... it looks like a tamper would require 38 cfm at 90 psi, which is a 6-8k compressor, which requires a 35kw-45kw generator, which would be a good 25k. So that would be around 35-40k just to get started with the basic pneumatic tools? Any way to do it cheaper?
I see many rammed earth buildings that are only a single floor. If there is a second floor it appears to be wood frame construction. It appears that builders are nervous about multistory rammed earth construction. David Easton is building using rammed earth infills inside a reinforced concrete frame. Are there studies available about steel reinforced, earthquake resistant, multistory rammed earth buildings? My second question is how your wall with an insulation core compares in thermal performance to a sold rammed earth wall of the same thickness?
Great questions I have seen results on studies on many samples by several different university's and institutions but the only multi level public building I have seen is the springs preserve museum in las Vegas NV
@@thomasswedlund1097 I agree. I have heard of mud buildings up to five stories in the middle east. The problem is that they appear to have little or no resistance to earthquake damage. is there data about affordable tall earth buildings that are also quake proof?
@@johnamiddle Thank you. It appears that they have developed a method to securely bond rammed earth with 9% cement to rebar. I must spend more time trying to understand the details of their process. 100 feet is impressive. As they are located in Islamabad they surely have earthquake resistance uppermost in their designs.
I noticed the global view of areas that use rammed earth has Florida in the USA listed... but I cannot find any examples of this. We live in FL and on a tight budget but REALLY want a basic earth friendly home. Obviously we have hurricane, rainy and humid weather. Is this really an option for us? Earthbag and hemp homes almost seem impossible due to extreme labor and/or difficult to purchase building materials. Please help.
Bro Check m s FB nkta q rn to dun. Try to check earthbag. Mas ok un. Problma is ung engineer or building permit. Dq sure if pwd kht s bhy m. Pro ok ang mga gntong bahay. Search m.
water proof cement called portland cement // she also said most subsoils most???? why do the world govs want control of subsoils/??/ some~! have many uses.... $$$$$$
Yes but it needs a almost perfect ratio of sand and clay. Need m lrn reinforced ng rebar at 10% cement or kht apog un ung naresearch q. Try to look also ung earthbag.
Too much to talk about here, but be very careful if contracting out the work in Ontario. This is something you could do yourself, or there are other options than Aerecura. Rammed Earth is in my opinion a viable building material in many ways, but the workmanship is where attention to detail is prudent. There are lots of good reasons to go this route but you don't want to get mistreated and swindled by any of the active builders as I did. If you want to know more, let me know. I'm basically a guinea pig right now with my newly built rammed earth house and so I can give you an ongoing resource of information if you like.
I'm all for sustainability but this feels like a tree-hugging hippy's illusion. Until and unless they can prove that rammed earth can be made commercially and structurally viable at scale by being cost-competitive in multi-story buildings then I won't be convinced that it is a mass solution. Right now it is what it is - a one-off solution in special cases for tree huggers
Thank you ! Greetings from new brunswick
Love this idea. But was that phenolic insulation used in the walls.. what about offgassing? You say it’s permeable. But phenolics are not moisture permeable are they? couldn’t you use straw or hemp shiv. Or perhaps chopped miscanthus and lime ? For the insulation?
HI, Russ here from central Georgia, USA. Since in the south east USA we often experience months at a time when the temperature can be extremely hot with high humidity in the day time, I think rammed earth would not work because at night it may only cool off 10 degrees f. That means the walls will not get a chance to cool off, and the interior of the house would swelter day and night in the heat. Perhaps an outer layer of insulation and white reflective paint could be used so the rammed earth will not get as hot in the day, I wonder if that would work? Secondly, I find few materials here to make a keyhole garden with out spending a lot of money for construction materials , but I suspect a rammed earth version of this could work with reusable forms. A cement cap would be needed to keep the rain from washing away the dirt with the intensive rainfall we often get in the summer. The second challenge would be the plants inside the keyhole garden may erode the earthen walls, so some sort of protection would be needed to avoid that. If those problems could be solved, and reusable forms can be made, I think rammed earth keyhole gardens and retainer walls could be a good, inexpensive way to make some very attractive landscaping elements. Any comments?
In Australia out in the desert there is a lot of dirt and it was used by the First Nation people to build their own rammed earth houses.
i guess Im kind of off topic but do anyone know a good site to stream new movies online?
@Callan Kyree i use FlixZone. Just google for it =)
@Tomas Killian Definitely, have been using Flixzone for years myself :D
@Tomas Killian Thanks, I signed up and it seems like they got a lot of movies there =) Appreciate it !
@Callan Kyree Glad I could help :D
I have 2 questions and a request about rammed house building.
1) How does construction of rammed earth homes integrate electric wiring and water/sewer plumbing especially for a 2 plus more floors?
2) Since the walls are made of earth, how do the walls survive in the shower or if rained on?
3) Is it possible to make/share a video that shows how the electric wiring and water/sewer plumbing lines are constructed and integrated into the walls?
Answers to the above questions will be very helpful in deciding about rammed earth homes and help shed a light on how electricity and water will be incorporated in rammed earth building. Thank you so much for the informative information.
I want to know the same thing.. I have seen tons of rammed house construction but none of them show how to do the electric wiring and the bathroom pipes.. Please anyone who can reply 🙏
I would use galvanised surface mounted trunking for electrics and copper pipes surface mounted for water. Looks great
Hiya there
My home burnt down and I thought I'd be rebuilding with rammed earth. I'm technically ''off grid'' so... I was wondering what type of tamper/compressor/generator would be required.
So far... it looks like a tamper would require 38 cfm at 90 psi, which is a 6-8k compressor, which requires a 35kw-45kw generator, which would be a good 25k.
So that would be around 35-40k just to get started with the basic pneumatic tools? Any way to do it cheaper?
I love the uneven/sloping layers and colored layers.
Quentin Branch scoffed at that when I went to his seminar.
I see many rammed earth buildings that are only a single floor. If there is a second floor it appears to be wood frame construction. It appears that builders are nervous about multistory rammed earth construction. David Easton is building using rammed earth infills inside a reinforced concrete frame. Are there studies available about steel reinforced, earthquake resistant, multistory rammed earth buildings? My second question is how your wall with an insulation core compares in thermal performance to a sold rammed earth wall of the same thickness?
Great questions I have seen results on studies on many samples by several different university's and institutions but the only multi level public building I have seen is the springs preserve museum in las Vegas NV
What about the houses in Spain and China the she showed? The look pretty tall to me.
@@thomasswedlund1097 I agree. I have heard of mud buildings up to five stories in the middle east. The problem is that they appear to have little or no resistance to earthquake damage. is there data about affordable tall earth buildings that are also quake proof?
@@jamesfergusson546 sirewall.com/portfolio/telenor-headoffice-islamabad/
there is many examples done by Sirewall
@@johnamiddle Thank you. It appears that they have developed a method to securely bond rammed earth with 9% cement to rebar. I must spend more time trying to understand the details of their process. 100 feet is impressive. As they are located in Islamabad they surely have earthquake resistance uppermost in their designs.
Great info... We love our rammed earth home.
I wanna to make it in Bangladesh. Pls help me.
@@anizuzzamanzaman4002 I'll help any way I can..
I noticed the global view of areas that use rammed earth has Florida in the USA listed... but I cannot find any examples of this. We live in FL and on a tight budget but REALLY want a basic earth friendly home. Obviously we have hurricane, rainy and humid weather. Is this really an option for us? Earthbag and hemp homes almost seem impossible due to extreme labor and/or difficult to purchase building materials. Please help.
Do you teach rammed earth somewhere in Ontario ????
Thanks.
Can we expose rammed earth compound wall to rain, pl give detail if possible
Great
Is this applicable in phil. ? I mean can we construct homes in the philippines used rammed earth ? (For thesis purposes)
Bro Check m s FB nkta q rn to dun. Try to check earthbag. Mas ok un. Problma is ung engineer or building permit. Dq sure if pwd kht s bhy m. Pro ok ang mga gntong bahay. Search m.
I'm interested, too.
Want 2 use dis sa bhay..
Great talk. Hope to contact you soon.
Is it only sand and earth or do you add cement?
water proof cement called portland cement // she also said most subsoils most???? why do the world govs want control of subsoils/??/ some~! have many uses.... $$$$$$
Some are made purely from earth, no cement. That's true rammed earth.
I want to do one in Morocco
Me too
Do you still live in Morocco?
is it earthquake, typhoon, flood proof like in my country philippines?
Yes but it needs a almost perfect ratio of sand and clay. Need m lrn reinforced ng rebar at 10% cement or kht apog un ung naresearch q. Try to look also ung earthbag.
I want to build a hybrid house with multiple building technologies
Where you teaching in Toronto, physics?
What was the total cost of your home?
Jacob, sorry for the delay, here's the contct infor for Sylvia www.aerecura.ca/read-me/
Jacob, I have a rammed earth home. If you want truth and details, I can provide. I am in Ontario.
Jeremy Tisdale some details pls.
Too much to talk about here, but be very careful if contracting out the work in Ontario. This is something you could do yourself, or there are other options than Aerecura. Rammed Earth is in my opinion a viable building material in many ways, but the workmanship is where attention to detail is prudent. There are lots of good reasons to go this route but you don't want to get mistreated and swindled by any of the active builders as I did. If you want to know more, let me know. I'm basically a guinea pig right now with my newly built rammed earth house and so I can give you an ongoing resource of information if you like.
Jeremy Tisdale thx.
실비아 쿡!! 영상 참좋아요!!
Ratio mixing pls....
Discussing rammed earth without mentioning its history in Africa is an oversight bordering on racism
Thats cultural appropriation. Rammed earth is racist lol
lol come on
yes, labour intensive. cheap material, expensive labour.
I'm all for sustainability but this feels like a tree-hugging hippy's illusion. Until and unless they can prove that rammed earth can be made commercially and structurally viable at scale by being cost-competitive in multi-story buildings then I won't be convinced that it is a mass solution. Right now it is what it is - a one-off solution in special cases for tree huggers