I was thinking, during that segment: the built-in insulation is a great idea, and the system looks very cool and easy to work with... but there's no lateral bracing whatsoever. I'd hate to be inside - or on the sidewalk next to it - in the next earthquake.
That was not a modular septic tank. That was a modular septic field. It would still require a septic tank likely with 2 chambers to separate solids from grey water.
Yeah, I don't consider any construction from that part of the world, something to ever be considered. The drive in that part of the world is how to make things cheap and quick, that looks like solid traditional construction when completed. Their line of thinking on so many things is that if it looks the same, it is the same. But of course, it isn't the same.
@@stupitdog9686 Well you should know that these are made in Turkey and supposedly can be used anywhere in the country. of course in areas where the recent quake hit, they lost about 70% of homes and many more buildings. The average concrete block is about 4 times stronger than this size hollow clay bricks. It's probably worse than that with this stryofoam insert design. They use these clay blocks because they are a cheap substitute for concrete,. Thet slap walls together with these, often very poorly done and then cover it with mortar. When they're done, it looks like a solid poured concrete wall. The operative words being, "looks like". The reality is that it's a wonder these walls hold themselves up!
@@stupitdog9686 They are widely used in some countries that have little in the way of building codes. I watch a lot of these construction videos posted to promote their companies and I frequently cringe at what I see. The way these guys do concrete has some pretty obvious flaws. The use of different type of red clay bricks is common, but it's quite difficult to find published specs, which makes me suspicious. There has been a lot of hollow designs showing up in videos. Generally these have a wider footprint than solid bricks. Many very similar inside to standard concrete blocks. The hollow designs are extrusions and to makes them with any consistency, the formulations would seem to be in need of change. Apparently, they now mix in fly ash and even rice hulls, and other materials. The resulting brick extrusions may be a bit firmer so they can cure to consistent shapes. The hollow, waffle designs are better thermally and that's what the promote from an energy standpoint and larger lightweight blocks build faster. But strangely enough, these blocks are designed to be used with the cavities horizontal. They should be more structurally strong the other way. Common sense suggests that structural compressive strength is lower than concrete blocks, but without specified numbers, you don't really know how strong these are. That said, testing can be done independently just by purchasing the blocks ad doing standard structural testing on them. I did find a source fr such data which confirms much of what I surmised. I'm not surprised. I think the recent earthquakes have given us some good data. When old, well constructed buildings were left with little or no damage, but newer construction buildings became ruble, I think that's pretty telling. Turkey has pointed a finger at contractors cutting corners and ignoring what little standards they had. I will admit that there is a huge lack of specification data, But with some limited data and basic knowledge of materials and construction techniques, it's still fairly easy to draw at least some general conclusions. And proof is in performance.
I'm just saying, if you can mention Turkey, but you might want to rethink referring to them as having a strong passion or embracing innovating methods, when almost 20% of the country crumbled from an earthquake due to poor construction practices.
I like the bricks that allow for insulation inside the wall however I am concerned about the things you want to put in the house after you move in that require you to drill wholes into the wall like TV, furniture, etc
Because these are not bricks. These are ceramic blocks. They are better than bricks in terms of thermal insulation, but they are somewhat fragile. You need special mounts to hang something on the walls made of such blocks.
It's trash, the insulation has gaps at each brick. Better off doing regular bricks and external uninterrupted insulation... PS: looks like someone else made the exact same comment above.
"Turkey is building so fast by embracing innovative methods". You haven't watched the news much for the past year, have you? They were building fast by cutting every corner imaginable. To an eventually deadly result.
When bricks have holes through them longways, what stops outside air from entering the house? It seems like there wouldn't be any seal from the outside
@1:10 no way that werent crushed by the machine that installed it @2:05 way too expensive @2:56 last only 10 traverses. broken edges. also stupid @3:46 "build a super strong deck and our product works perfectly" @4:14 "its fancy because its slave labor" @5:05 "they took our jobs!" @6:08 you got a licence? no. get to work @7:51 fake it till you make it @8:30 seems like a good product @9:46 a solution without a problem @10:42 too expensive for projects @11:41 will it also feed my cat and do my taxes? @12:11 "our thing is awesome if you buy all this other stuff too" @10:50 nah. just nah @14:08 no way an engineer approved this
The Italian plastic formwork is pretty neat. Only people who have worked with big forms for concrete know how much of a pain it can be. Italians as usual are quite impressive with their constructions. 80% time saving is no joke.
That lift hoist, it's pretty common and for a long time widely available in the Netherlands for moving from and to old apartment buildings without elevators.
Great video overall, but that "septic tank" section looked pretty sketchy. Those just looked like leech-lines, but if methane can melt styrofoam like acetone can, those things will dissolve into slime in fairly short order. And they wouldn't replace a tank, they'd have to connect to one or more. That leech field at 1:02 seemed way too big.
1:20 Yeah, and we all saw how good those constructions really are when the earthquake hits. And look how those bricks are laid. OMG, that is so disgustingly incompetent. Poor crafstmanship
@@georger5558 we have gutters dumbass, he wants a rain catching system not a drain you dunce, a gutter would move the rain off the roof to the ground/a drain, he wants to store it ie rain CATCHING systems, which is illegal in most areas of U.S. and where it isn't it's pretty strict and I've seen people who've gotten in legal trouble for it, older people who just want to farm their own food and catch their own water without being bothered usually.
@@georger5558 lmao the implication that Americans don't have gutters (you guys cant speak, you dont even have ac or proper light switches), the commentator means an alternative form of gutter
@@leonardonetagamer lmao where do you think I'm from? I have AC and light switches, jeez the American school system really has failed, I thought it was just a joke that Americans were dumb!
Already around since 1985 at least in the the Netherlands, my parents had one in their home, which was built in that year. Good quality product, but not an innovation in 2023 😂
Using recycled materials is *not* "helping the planet". It's "hurting the planet a tiny bit less". If you want to help the planet, use second hand materials, build multi-family units or don't build if you can avoid it.
the 3rd to last clip has a version called chemlink curb kit. i used to work with thos on certain solar jobs. its definitely a satisfying feeling that it will not leak.
1:57 I think the technology has less to do with thermal protection than with earthquake resistance. The flexible plastic probably ensures that the walls are "movable".
What’s so special about that Velux window. That’s a standard German window since forever. You find it in almost all houses here. PS: Even the brand is the same to make it clear.
Was that something to laugh at? Natural disasters doesn't equates zero accident nor zero victim. Even Japan with higher standard in construction's safety still claimed life.
@@eone2345 the events no, but the comment in relation to the fact that corners were cut in the construction of a large amount of the buildings that crumbled to the ground in moments, if only the buildings had some of the strength of the comment then perhaps many lives would of been saved. Hope that clears that up for you. 😉
2:00 any bricklayers out there wanna correct me on this but it looks like that wall will just fall over. they dont even tamp the bricks down. How's that supposed to work?
Recycled materials aren't eco-friendly if they can still cause environmental damage after being applied. If you "recycle" plastics into aggregate construction products, they can leech microplastics and plasticizers into the soil. That soil will be difficult to sanitize after 50 years, which means if you want to grow some food, you'd have to remove the whole top layer and treat it as "polluted soil". In most cases, it's actually better to just fully burn plastics in a waste processing plant with a properly filtered exhaust, so you get some useful electricity/heat out of it.
1. Any material can and will leave micro particles over time. And Calcium carbonates and high amounts of stone dust from the pure concrete that can drastically increase soil acidity really doesn't seem any better in comparison. 2. Generally when you build a house or appartment, it means the area is not suitable for agriculture in the first place, or that the community has no plans on doing agriculture on it for many generations to come. 3. Even if THAT is still a problem, buildings occupy far lesser space than agriculture, so not much is actually lost. Worst that can happen is that after bulldozing the area is become a micro desert that isn't even big enough to be seen on google maps
I noticed that there's NO steel reinforcement in those extruded-brick building walls. Given the enormous loss of life during the recent earthquakes in Turkey, I wouldn't be too excited abut using these building techniques...
I wish these clips would offer more than just the pros for these products. Most seem made of various kinds of plastic, and even when using recycled materials, still far from good from the environment. Downsides of technologies for making these products, such as 3d printing, also don't get a single word. There is a reason why none of these technologies are widely spread outside of their very limited use cases.
Indeed, hand made tiles can be classified as engineering marvel and another level of construction. As a professional tiler I can say these are the worst kind of tiles. Different sizes, slightly different shapes, thicknesses, incredibly soft thus easy to brake and they require special treatment on a frequent basis. Yet, they cost a lot of money.
New tech to build things the same old wasteful, weak and labor intensive way. I'll be impressed when you build houses that can last 1000 years without having to redo every part of it several times.
Burying a bunch of plastic material, recycled or not, sounds like a bad idea to me. Will this not break down and contaminate the soil and water supply?
5:30 Not really earthquake resilient, isn't it? A small horizontal displacement (standard with earthquake) and the small arch ... fall on the head of the occupants. Similar remark for the brick wall in Turkey, earlier in the video. That kind on construction is forbidden in most part of Canada, and not only because it is not earthquake resistant but because many incidents had occurred in the past with "block walls", and not only with hurricanes or earthquake but through foundation failures or re-managements for doors and windows.
ofc you can seal and split apart two metals but going for the cause of the corrosion (such as choosing bolts that don't cause bi-metal corrosion) is maybe the better and more long-lasting method
Usually when something is said to last you 50 years or so, it means it lasts for pretty much forever, even far beyond 50 years. The thing is that by law companies are required to provide a minimum garanteed lifetime. This is why we have bottled water with expiration dates, or even sugar or salt.
and that is why Turkey suffered a lot during the Earthquake, too many constructions approved only means one thing, corruption and it was revealed with the collapses.
Why is everybody "improving" and using plastics and composite stuff that nobody can ever recycle again? Putting tons of non recycleable materials in our houses and ground... That's not smart... That's dumb... 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
these are great videos to learn something from. it's a great way to see other individuals thinking out of the box that try to find a solution to solve certain construction issues. The future of the construction industry has a great future for individuals that are dedicated to the art of building. its great to read the comments from people with specific trade experience as they see stuff that most would not know about. Cheers to all
More and more plastics that won't last more than 10 years. No thank you. Remember houses that last 100 years? We don't have those anymore because instead of good old bricks, we use ply woods and plastics now.
You know what would make this building extra awesome? Plastic. Lets bury it in the ground and put it in the walls and make our driveways out of it. Plastic is awesome.
So.. the decking doesn't bend, warp, or rot. It doesn't rust, absorb liquids, doesn't need to be painted or sanded, and doesn't contain lead... BUT... it can be used in food. OK haha
It is kinda interesting. So our technology is in plastics. Go back to the old world technology, limestone, marble, copper, gold. So much more and gone forever.
Turkey has a strong passion for construction by cutting corners on earthquake safety measures to be more precise 1:21
I was thinking, during that segment: the built-in insulation is a great idea, and the system looks very cool and easy to work with... but there's no lateral bracing whatsoever. I'd hate to be inside - or on the sidewalk next to it - in the next earthquake.
AND they didn't even put mortar between each brick just top and bottom negating any insulation anyways as air will just penetrate all over the place.
And those bricks will do *nothing* to minimise contact noises.
Corners bring stability to the masonry. But with this stone shape and insulation, it can also be a weakening.@@MarcTompkins
I agree 100%@@michiellombaers3198
That was not a modular septic tank. That was a modular septic field. It would still require a septic tank likely with 2 chambers to separate solids from grey water.
I was thinking the same thing, it looks like a leach field. I was wondering how you would clean/pump that "tank" out.
@@bikerbobcatq
it will back fire back into the house
And it's not deep enough Once it leak ...it will smell like shit
يمكن ان يزراع فوق تلك مرشحة نباتات الخس ستقوم بالتعامل مع فضلات بشكل اكثر استدامة
What's the Earthquake resistance of those bricks/polystyrene there in Turkey. Looks flimsy for a County that gets devastated from time to time.
Yeah, I don't consider any construction from that part of the world, something to ever be considered.
The drive in that part of the world is how to make things cheap and quick, that looks like solid traditional construction when completed. Their line of thinking on so many things is that if it looks the same, it is the same. But of course, it isn't the same.
I wonder what tech. is used to screw a heavy load on a wall like that? You couldn't just drill a hole and use a rawl plug to screw into!?
@@stupitdog9686 Well you should know that these are made in Turkey and supposedly can be used anywhere in the country. of course in areas where the recent quake hit, they lost about 70% of homes and many more buildings.
The average concrete block is about 4 times stronger than this size hollow clay bricks. It's probably worse than that with this stryofoam insert design.
They use these clay blocks because they are a cheap substitute for concrete,. Thet slap walls together with these, often very poorly done and then cover it with mortar. When they're done, it looks like a solid poured concrete wall. The operative words being, "looks like". The reality is that it's a wonder these walls hold themselves up!
@@professorg8383 Wow! I've seen similar construction methods and bricks used in lots of country's. Scary!
@@stupitdog9686 They are widely used in some countries that have little in the way of building codes. I watch a lot of these construction videos posted to promote their companies and I frequently cringe at what I see. The way these guys do concrete has some pretty obvious flaws. The use of different type of red clay bricks is common, but it's quite difficult to find published specs, which makes me suspicious.
There has been a lot of hollow designs showing up in videos. Generally these have a wider footprint than solid bricks. Many very similar inside to standard concrete blocks. The hollow designs are extrusions and to makes them with any consistency, the formulations would seem to be in need of change. Apparently, they now mix in fly ash and even rice hulls, and other materials. The resulting brick extrusions may be a bit firmer so they can cure to consistent shapes. The hollow, waffle designs are better thermally and that's what the promote from an energy standpoint and larger lightweight blocks build faster. But strangely enough, these blocks are designed to be used with the cavities horizontal. They should be more structurally strong the other way. Common sense suggests that structural compressive strength is lower than concrete blocks, but without specified numbers, you don't really know how strong these are.
That said, testing can be done independently just by purchasing the blocks ad doing standard structural testing on them. I did find a source fr such data which confirms much of what I surmised. I'm not surprised. I think the recent earthquakes have given us some good data. When old, well constructed buildings were left with little or no damage, but newer construction buildings became ruble, I think that's pretty telling. Turkey has pointed a finger at contractors cutting corners and ignoring what little standards they had.
I will admit that there is a huge lack of specification data, But with some limited data and basic knowledge of materials and construction techniques, it's still fairly easy to draw at least some general conclusions. And proof is in performance.
Have you guys heard of this new miracle material called ASBESTOS?! I think we should put it in everything!
great idea!
It is amazing material and comes with free cancer.
Smells great
@@k-ccan be used for glitter and kids pixie dust play kits...
Wow, let's install it in every building that exists!!!!!!!!!🤪🤪🤪
Note to all. I used to sell composite decking just beware that they get insanely hot if in the direct sunlight. But firewalkers need now worry.
I'm just saying, if you can mention Turkey, but you might want to rethink referring to them as having a strong passion or embracing innovating methods, when almost 20% of the country crumbled from an earthquake due to poor construction practices.
And the similar brick they are using has been on the market for over 30 years.
Political corruption
That’s political corruption cutting corners to save money, not the building materials shown in this video.
Not the government building tho, independent builders are cheapskates there
It is an old building, i think you are being unfair here commenting
I like the bricks that allow for insulation inside the wall
however I am concerned about the things you want to put in the house after you move in that require you to drill wholes into the wall
like TV, furniture, etc
Was thinking the same. Those bricks might be good for insulation but look a bit fragile and useless for screws and bolts.
..turkey’s way to improve earthquake safety!… 😱🤥 🤯 ..a spit in the face of all earthquake victims this year and the countries sending aid/money
Because these are not bricks. These are ceramic blocks. They are better than bricks in terms of thermal insulation, but they are somewhat fragile. You need special mounts to hang something on the walls made of such blocks.
Not only that but since the insulation has gaps inbetween, it isn't as effective as if you were to glue it on the stone surface as a continuous layer
It's trash, the insulation has gaps at each brick. Better off doing regular bricks and external uninterrupted insulation...
PS: looks like someone else made the exact same comment above.
Dude, these are either 10 years old technologies or just building lifehacks... Has a new level been reached in about 2008? XD
what happened in 2008? concrete 3D printing or something?
wow new construction technology is so cool i didn't think it would develop like that
You actually complimented Turkeys construction techniques lol
no clue why, but its mainly based on how much they build, not how well. And considering the clip they showed.. yikes.
"Turkey is building so fast by embracing innovative methods". You haven't watched the news much for the past year, have you? They were building fast by cutting every corner imaginable. To an eventually deadly result.
That's a drain field, not a septic tank!
3D-print clay bricks are not faster than extruded clay bricks. Have you seen the speed of that thing?
yes if its 1:1 but those can be scaled . Lets say if all in specified allignment they can do 100 at once .
@@hemanth593 extrusion can be scaled as well, and takes much less floor space to process the same rate of clay.
5:19 Extruding clay to make any kind of form, wether it's bricks or ceramic blocks is much faster and cost effective than 3d printing.
When bricks have holes through them longways, what stops outside air from entering the house? It seems like there wouldn't be any seal from the outside
At least 10% of the goods you recycle are used in recycled products. The rest end up in landfills.
@1:10 no way that werent crushed by the machine that installed it
@2:05 way too expensive
@2:56 last only 10 traverses. broken edges. also stupid
@3:46 "build a super strong deck and our product works perfectly"
@4:14 "its fancy because its slave labor"
@5:05 "they took our jobs!"
@6:08 you got a licence? no. get to work
@7:51 fake it till you make it
@8:30 seems like a good product
@9:46 a solution without a problem
@10:42 too expensive for projects
@11:41 will it also feed my cat and do my taxes?
@12:11 "our thing is awesome if you buy all this other stuff too"
@10:50 nah. just nah
@14:08 no way an engineer approved this
The Italian plastic formwork is pretty neat. Only people who have worked with big forms for concrete know how much of a pain it can be. Italians as usual are quite impressive with their constructions. 80% time saving is no joke.
Turkey. Innovations. If only their construction regulations were "innovated" as well.
A new level of confidence and power
Pls do more stuff like that! Never miss the new uploads
3d printed bricks: how to make more expensive bricks with nothing more than cheaper ones
That lift hoist, it's pretty common and for a long time widely available in the Netherlands for moving from and to old apartment buildings without elevators.
Moving companies in Germany use them as well, but only as a last resort if the staircases are way too narrow.
Love this channel
Helping the planet by filling the ground with plastic? How low can technology sink?
Great construction techniques.
Great video overall, but that "septic tank" section looked pretty sketchy. Those just looked like leech-lines, but if methane can melt styrofoam like acetone can, those things will dissolve into slime in fairly short order. And they wouldn't replace a tank, they'd have to connect to one or more. That leech field at 1:02 seemed way too big.
It was freaking huge. Probably a multi-family system.
@13:25.... in India, we use old scooters..... innovative.... we don't let go of old techn.....
1:20 Yeah, and we all saw how good those constructions really are when the earthquake hits.
And look how those bricks are laid. OMG, that is so disgustingly incompetent. Poor crafstmanship
I wonder if roofing companies have developed rain catchments systems for buildings
They have had gutters and downspouts for many years.
You must be an American if you don't have gutters yet, I forget how far behind American really is sometimes.
@@georger5558 we have gutters dumbass, he wants a rain catching system not a drain you dunce, a gutter would move the rain off the roof to the ground/a drain, he wants to store it ie rain CATCHING systems, which is illegal in most areas of U.S. and where it isn't it's pretty strict and I've seen people who've gotten in legal trouble for it, older people who just want to farm their own food and catch their own water without being bothered usually.
@@georger5558 lmao the implication that Americans don't have gutters (you guys cant speak, you dont even have ac or proper light switches), the commentator means an alternative form of gutter
@@leonardonetagamer lmao where do you think I'm from? I have AC and light switches, jeez the American school system really has failed, I thought it was just a joke that Americans were dumb!
That type of velux roof window is aprox. 20 years old. Been installing hundreds of them.
Already around since 1985 at least in the the Netherlands, my parents had one in their home, which was built in that year. Good quality product, but not an innovation in 2023 😂
2:14 aren't these already used everywhere?
Using recycled materials is *not* "helping the planet". It's "hurting the planet a tiny bit less". If you want to help the planet, use second hand materials, build multi-family units or don't build if you can avoid it.
the 3rd to last clip has a version called chemlink curb kit. i used to work with thos on certain solar jobs. its definitely a satisfying feeling that it will not leak.
1:16 No wonder so many died in the turkey Equake. What a load of bull and cutting corners.
Water has memory. She doesn’t like going through pipes that twist and turn.
I would love to see how much corrosion happens under the Effisus protections.
Great video¡¡¡
1:57
I think the technology has less to do with thermal protection than with earthquake resistance.
The flexible plastic probably ensures that the walls are "movable".
please post links to these products
What’s so special about that Velux window. That’s a standard German window since forever. You find it in almost all houses here.
PS: Even the brand is the same to make it clear.
Interesting that at 8:00 they mention English and Flemish bond, but the illustrated results are neither of these - they're running/stretcher bond.
😂😂 @1m:16s "TURKEY HAS A STRONG PASSION FOR CONSTRUCTION" 🤔 i wonder if the earthquake victims agree?
Was that something to laugh at?
Natural disasters doesn't equates zero accident nor zero victim. Even Japan with higher standard in construction's safety still claimed life.
@@eone2345 the events no, but the comment in relation to the fact that corners were cut in the construction of a large amount of the buildings that crumbled to the ground in moments, if only the buildings had some of the strength of the comment then perhaps many lives would of been saved. Hope that clears that up for you. 😉
@@Cobbydon cut corners, agree, but that laughing icon in that same sentence, it was inappropriate
@@eone2345 opinions are like arseholses, we've all got one, and they all stink. Thank you for sharing your stench 💩😤
Yeah, thinking the same thing when I saw no rebar was used in case of earth quakes
They should create rooftop dog parks in cities and put solar panels above it.
Good job
2:00 any bricklayers out there wanna correct me on this but it looks like that wall will just fall over. they dont even tamp the bricks down. How's that supposed to work?
3:58 - if you get tired of hearing various ways people can build things out of plastic
Recycled materials aren't eco-friendly if they can still cause environmental damage after being applied.
If you "recycle" plastics into aggregate construction products, they can leech microplastics and plasticizers into the soil. That soil will be difficult to sanitize after 50 years, which means if you want to grow some food, you'd have to remove the whole top layer and treat it as "polluted soil". In most cases, it's actually better to just fully burn plastics in a waste processing plant with a properly filtered exhaust, so you get some useful electricity/heat out of it.
1. Any material can and will leave micro particles over time. And Calcium carbonates and high amounts of stone dust from the pure concrete that can drastically increase soil acidity really doesn't seem any better in comparison.
2. Generally when you build a house or appartment, it means the area is not suitable for agriculture in the first place, or that the community has no plans on doing agriculture on it for many generations to come.
3. Even if THAT is still a problem, buildings occupy far lesser space than agriculture, so not much is actually lost. Worst that can happen is that after bulldozing the area is become a micro desert that isn't even big enough to be seen on google maps
A window that lets in light & doesn't leak. WAOW !!!! what a breakthrough. This list is pish.
I noticed that there's NO steel reinforcement in those extruded-brick building walls. Given the enormous loss of life during the recent earthquakes in Turkey, I wouldn't be too excited abut using these building techniques...
I wish these clips would offer more than just the pros for these products. Most seem made of various kinds of plastic, and even when using recycled materials, still far from good from the environment. Downsides of technologies for making these products, such as 3d printing, also don't get a single word. There is a reason why none of these technologies are widely spread outside of their very limited use cases.
Turkish Z Bricks:
Bricklayers- YEAHHHH
Electricians- Noooo!!!
Realy I like this video
Indeed, hand made tiles can be classified as engineering marvel and another level of construction. As a professional tiler I can say these are the worst kind of tiles.
Different sizes, slightly different shapes, thicknesses, incredibly soft thus easy to brake and they require special treatment on a frequent basis. Yet, they cost a lot of money.
The lift is really cool
Already common in Europe for the past few decennia.
New tech to build things the same old wasteful, weak and labor intensive way. I'll be impressed when you build houses that can last 1000 years without having to redo every part of it several times.
Even if it is recycled Plastic - it is still Plastic which gets broken down to microplastic.
Burying a bunch of plastic material, recycled or not, sounds like a bad idea to me. Will this not break down and contaminate the soil and water supply?
5:30 Not really earthquake resilient, isn't it? A small horizontal displacement (standard with earthquake) and the small arch ... fall on the head of the occupants. Similar remark for the brick wall in Turkey, earlier in the video. That kind on construction is forbidden in most part of Canada, and not only because it is not earthquake resistant but because many incidents had occurred in the past with "block walls", and not only with hurricanes or earthquake but through foundation failures or re-managements for doors and windows.
1:11 why they put so much garbage in soil?
ofc you can seal and split apart two metals but going for the cause of the corrosion (such as choosing bolts that don't cause bi-metal corrosion) is maybe the better and more long-lasting method
Abysmal selection. I stopped when you called a VELUX a next generation technology. This thing has been in common use for decades.
Absolutely love this channel!!!! Underrated!!!
2:48 - that's been around in the UK since I was a kid, that's nothing new. Every unpaved park or popular dirt track has that.
Those fake brick walls last up to 50 years?
My brick building that is 80 yo: UNLIMITED POWER
Usually when something is said to last you 50 years or so, it means it lasts for pretty much forever, even far beyond 50 years. The thing is that by law companies are required to provide a minimum garanteed lifetime. This is why we have bottled water with expiration dates, or even sugar or salt.
And yet the old prevails and the new decays
You forgot to mention just how expensive the Plastic decking is mate
0:58 you put packing peanuts around a pipe and held it together with a hair net?
02:25 "as a result a gravel area will always look aesthetically pleasing" .. as long as you like the look of plastic instead of gravel. /s
10:32 - pretty sure the inspiration came while getting a lap dance at the local strip joint
0:43 - So, 5 feet is 1 metre and twice that many feet (10) is 3 metres, which means 1 x 2 = 3. Got it.
Turkey also has a passion for not being good in building apartments.
with a title like that i thought there'd have been a level in here
and that is why Turkey suffered a lot during the Earthquake, too many constructions approved only means one thing, corruption and it was revealed with the collapses.
Imagine having to change the septic tank... Good luck
That first one is a leach field, not a septic tank.
Why is everybody "improving" and using plastics and composite stuff that nobody can ever recycle again? Putting tons of non recycleable materials in our houses and ground... That's not smart... That's dumb... 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
all of those technologies require putting plastic under the soil lol
these are great videos to learn something from. it's a great way to see other individuals thinking out of the box that try to find a solution to solve certain construction issues. The future of the construction industry has a great future for individuals that are dedicated to the art of building. its great to read the comments from people with specific trade experience as they see stuff that most would not know about. Cheers to all
I don't know if I'd brag about Turkey's construction methods
The last item is such a waste of materials. All that plastic just to raise the floor 1 meter. WHY ?? What purpose does this serve ??
it's answered in the video
It can be reused.
Plastic in the ground, plastic in the walls, plastic plastic, plastic. What could go wrong?
great ideas great content
More and more plastics that won't last more than 10 years. No thank you. Remember houses that last 100 years? We don't have those anymore because instead of good old bricks, we use ply woods and plastics now.
I hope all these plastic products is made from recycled plastic.
You know what would make this building extra awesome? Plastic. Lets bury it in the ground and put it in the walls and make our driveways out of it. Plastic is awesome.
turkey has a passion for construction heheheheheh so when theres an earthquake they always suffer significant building damage
None of these technologies show any concern for toxic pollutants.
What tremensous products!!
Where can I get the modular septic system?
It’s not septic. It’s a French drain.
Nice.
Composite decking however get's too hot to walk barefoot on in the sun??
Yet, the house prices are going up
So.. the decking doesn't bend, warp, or rot. It doesn't rust, absorb liquids, doesn't need to be painted or sanded, and doesn't contain lead... BUT... it can be used in food. OK haha
Amazing
Turkey has worse building quality
What happened in last earthquake it's hard to believe how bad it was done
That turned to a disaster
Touting Turkey's innovative building technologies didn't age well.
It is kinda interesting. So our technology is in plastics. Go back to the old world technology, limestone, marble, copper, gold. So much more and gone forever.
helping the planet by burying a bunch of plastic in the ground?
Don't think so.
Nice👍
All good and amazing tech... However I think that Turkey is not a good example for building technology and giving permits to build.