Dude, I kid you not, I hadn't even clicked into the content, I just caught it on the scroll... I heard the word meticulous within 30 seconds of each other... And then your comment came up, I started laughing. You know these are some wound up ass Europeans right here
This system has been a round for a while.... I am an Australian Architect and saw this first used in the Yucatan, Mexico nearly ten years ago. They used prefabbed walls, of similar, by using 4 inch PVC tubes in a mold and pouring them to end up with same resulting panels as these on the floor and roof...they also used the same technique for the floors and roof just with 5" PVC tubing. Each panel actually locked in with the other with a ridge and groove system. Walla were core filled and J-bars fitted to lock floors and roofs in these core filled locations. It really assisted in lowering and maintaining lower interior temperatures... and yes...was very fast to construct!
Everything was meticulously completed with meticulous precision and intricate meticulous technical acuity, meticulously enhancing durability and aesthetics, thereby showcasing the meticulous artistry of the craftsmen, which translates to meticulous comfort, confidence, and pride in the homeowners, as well as meticulous performance in the meticulously crafted building materials. Terrible dialog. Whoever wrote this needs to meticulously explore a thesaurus.
@@Demun1649 Well A. I work for an construction company. B. you can litterly see in the first few seconds of the video there are round grey things sticking out of the ground, which are called 'heipalen' (piles) in dutch where it was build.
@@Demun1649I believe because Groothuis Bouw, the contracting company (maybe this is their video?) is specialized in the above ground part of construction, not the underground part. Mostly they start with construction when the ground floor is ready. The main reason is that the foundation is different in the many regions of our country. In the west and north we need piling (sometimes even 20m long piles) and in the mid, south and east we mostly don’t.
How to describe this simple construction like it was an assembly of a rocket. Impressive how this guy can make something boring sound like the birth of the earth 😂
For industrial buildings you have to be with the 'hollander'. 30 years ago Martens NV in Hoogstraten build us a hangar in concrete walls which are isolated in and between the slabs and which are almost a foot thick. The thing is it isolates but only for a short time. After a week of frost it freezes in and outside. That is my main issue when I see these small concrete elements. The floor is a big concrete thick slab poured on the spot which is costly and foreseen with joints to work. It hasn't moved in 30 years. And it hasn't cracked. I would not build on hollow vaults unless there is proff by time that it is solid and does not move.
The problem is that they start above grade with these walls. They put it on a non insulated slab in Belgium. So you have a very large cold bridge at the start of the walls. The house they build here is an outstanding home. I build those in Belgium. It is faster, cheaper, better and indeed net zero. The inner walls are made of chalk-lime stone. Way better than the simple keramic hollow blocks. Inertion is perfect. And the hollow concrete channel elements are as strong as you wish. These are also used in Belgium for better results.
They're using aerated concrete which combines insulation and structural capability in one material. You typically choose the thickness of the blocks for the outer walls based on which climate zone you're in.
sounds like the description working on a cruise ship .... meticulously, stability ------------------------ so very precise work😂one mistake you've got 2 more warninig and you retired early
@@sqnhunter we mostly use prefeb elements for industrial buildings, not for residential construction but we now build more and more prefeb modular homes.
Dziwne,ten "dom" nie został na trwałe przytwierdzony do grunty.W praktyce tylko na nim leży. Nie posiada fundamentów.W Polsce tak nie budujemy nawet wiat śmietnikowych czy garażowych. Ale co kraj to obyczaj.
As a layperson, but very involved DIY homeowner, I have some mixed feelings. Obviously, I have no background arguing with building engineers. Still, I trust prefab homes made of wood will perform better as far as insulation goes, as well as even stability. I also don't understand why the floor was left seemingly un-insulated (I get those were hollow beams, but still). Moreover, since those beams were hollow (and given they were insulated from below), they could have been connected to warm air floor heating, alike the Romans had. The crawl space seem to have been enclosed, which may provide insulation, yet being fully closed it requires forced venting, which may work out to be a failure point at some point in the future. And once it fails, it can cause problems with mold, at least according to what I heard. All in all, I am very interested in this sort of stuff, but I have seen other construction methods that I find far more convincing.
Under the hollow beams on the ground floor there s a crawlspace for plumbing and stuf. On top of the hollowbeams there s rebar witcf some electric conduct and a layer of concreet. On top of that concreet there is more insulation, on top of that insulation there will be floorheating system layed into mud. On the first floor its the same only there will be some plumbing and as u call hvac system layed onto the hollow pipes in the concreet for the groundfloor. This hvac system ia a push pull system where one side of the house gives warmed fresh air into the hous and on the other side it will suck old air out. So this is basicly a ventilation with no cold air. On the outside u see the first walls and insulation, what u dont see is a layer of bricks after that infront of this insulation. These house last hundreds and hundreds of years with some maintenance ofc. And is air thight.
Hah, we're used to stick and frame construction in the U.S..... We build just about anything with 2x4s and 2x6s and sheet rock. Then we make it look nice and market it like it's the 9th world wonder and charge out of the azz for it. And if we're lucky It may last us 70-80 years. This kind of house would cost 3-4x what we pay in the U.S. for a house of the same dimensions.
So, not really that incredible. Pretty much all standard construction techniques, with the addition of pre-fabricated sections to speed the construction. The plethora of platitudes was the only incredible thing I noticed. I mean, how difficult is it to build a brick wall if you're a proficient bricklayer, especially if you're provided pre-fabricated lintel sections. It's just a very common house build these days.
You can"t say much about it. It is a fast 'snelbouw' way of building with a logic coming from industrial building. They work backwards. Only the future will tell if this is ...the future in building. What I do not see is any preparation for all utility canals, I also see much silicones, Silicones and glues do not last. I don't see cavity walls and I am aking myself what the K-value is. It ain't good to seal completely a building that cannot breathe anymore. I will wait and see what it brings. I also do not like putting that weight on hollow vaults instead of on a reinforced concrete slab. Anyways engineers will have calculated that it will hold. It is a nice house.
Under the hollow beams on the ground floor there s a crawlspace for plumbing and stuf. On top of the hollowbeams there s rebar witcf some electric conduct and a layer of concreet. On top of that concreet there is more insulation, on top of that insulation there will be floorheating system layed into mud. On the first floor its the same only there will be plumbing and as u call hvac system layed onto the hollow pipes in the concreet for the groundfloor. This hvac system ia a push pull system where one side of the house gives warmed fresh air into the hous and on the other side it will suck old air out. So this is basicly a ventilation with no cold air. On the outside u see the first walls and insulation, what u dont see is a layer of bricks after that infront of this insulation. These house last hundreds and hundreds of years with some maintenance ofc. And ar air thight with pre heated fresh air. This kinda house is what we call a zero on meter house which means that it will almost coast nothing to keep it on temp because of the insulation and heating system
In the beginning I thought they are going to build 5 store building with all the equipment, resources and amount of work used. I've seen 2 guys build nicer house than this and I bet it was technologically not weaker but at least 10 times cheaper.
What's with the pompous cliches about the dedication and professionalism of the skilled workers? Its a house being constructed, not a speech to the nation....
Okay. aI stop this firstly look at the brick. Work the facade of the house the bric arch wrongly build please find references on the old Italian or French house
If this dude says "meticulously" again, I'm going to lose it.
He failed to mention..hygenic..along with the 'm' word..
totally agree . just had to turn the sound off in order to watch the whole video
@@kolossrodossky493 He is EXTREMELY, and METICULOUSLY, VERBOSE. AIN'T 'E?
Dude, I kid you not, I hadn't even clicked into the content, I just caught it on the scroll... I heard the word meticulous within 30 seconds of each other... And then your comment came up, I started laughing.
You know these are some wound up ass Europeans right here
sounds like ai did the comment...
I love to watch this video. It lasts for a lifetime. Withstand hard weather conditions.
This system has been a round for a while.... I am an Australian Architect and saw this first used in the Yucatan, Mexico nearly ten years ago. They used prefabbed walls, of similar, by using 4 inch PVC tubes in a mold and pouring them to end up with same resulting panels as these on the floor and roof...they also used the same technique for the floors and roof just with 5" PVC tubing. Each panel actually locked in with the other with a ridge and groove system. Walla were core filled and J-bars fitted to lock floors and roofs in these core filled locations. It really assisted in lowering and maintaining lower interior temperatures... and yes...was very fast to construct!
1st and 2nd floor is called hollow core slabs. It's been around for many years. Use to be called whooteye. I did this work for 16 years.
Everything was meticulously completed with meticulous precision and intricate meticulous technical acuity, meticulously enhancing durability and aesthetics, thereby showcasing the meticulous artistry of the craftsmen, which translates to meticulous comfort, confidence, and pride in the homeowners, as well as meticulous performance in the meticulously crafted building materials.
Terrible dialog. Whoever wrote this needs to meticulously explore a thesaurus.
But didn’t the warmth of the masons enhance your job site experience? 🤣
What are those slabs with green circles on it? are they holes?
What was the construction time (Geert Puts)?
wow this system is one of the best things ive seen.
in my country these type of systems are barely used.
The truth , the whole truth and NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH...
In Belgium it is obligatory to let do an undergound stability survey by a recognized engineering bureau befor thinking of putting up any building.
In Spain too. They just laid the foundations on top... it might sink if you water the house on one side for 24 h...
@@xq_le1t0r97 there are concrete poles in the ground which hold the foundation up.
@@yorianwesterveen4619 That was NEVER mentioned, nor shown. Maybe I tend to deduce that your information is incorrect?
@@Demun1649 Well A. I work for an construction company. B. you can litterly see in the first few seconds of the video there are round grey things sticking out of the ground, which are called 'heipalen' (piles) in dutch where it was build.
@@Demun1649I believe because Groothuis Bouw, the contracting company (maybe this is their video?) is specialized in the above ground part of construction, not the underground part. Mostly they start with construction when the ground floor is ready. The main reason is that the foundation is different in the many regions of our country. In the west and north we need piling (sometimes even 20m long piles) and in the mid, south and east we mostly don’t.
Foundations are just laid on top of the ground? is it a superhard ground or something?
Thanks for the video
there are concrete poles in the ground which hold the foundation.
Foundations need piling in most parts of The Netherlands, in the beginning you can see the pile heads in the construction pit.
Seems like it leaves zero room for error.
Where would I find a materials list for the build ??
Thanks
Thanks
How to describe this simple construction like it was an assembly of a rocket. Impressive how this guy can make something boring sound like the birth of the earth 😂
Amazing I Like it
Could someone give me information about the company that appears on the HANJIN containers?
Direction and so on
Is very important please
Good concrete guys ❤❤
For industrial buildings you have to be with the 'hollander'. 30 years ago Martens NV in Hoogstraten build us a hangar in concrete walls which are isolated in and between the slabs and which are almost a foot thick. The thing is it isolates but only for a short time. After a week of frost it freezes in and outside. That is my main issue when I see these small concrete elements. The floor is a big concrete thick slab poured on the spot which is costly and foreseen with joints to work. It hasn't moved in 30 years. And it hasn't cracked. I would not build on hollow vaults unless there is proff by time that it is solid and does not move.
The problem is that they start above grade with these walls. They put it on a non insulated slab in Belgium. So you have a very large cold bridge at the start of the walls. The house they build here is an outstanding home. I build those in Belgium. It is faster, cheaper, better and indeed net zero. The inner walls are made of chalk-lime stone. Way better than the simple keramic hollow blocks. Inertion is perfect. And the hollow concrete channel elements are as strong as you wish. These are also used in Belgium for better results.
WHERE is the cavity insulation? Why was the insulation not included in the construction of the sections? Not meticulously crafted.
They're using aerated concrete which combines insulation and structural capability in one material. You typically choose the thickness of the blocks for the outer walls based on which climate zone you're in.
The voiceover is hilarious
Poetry in Motion very nice home 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍🦘🇦🇺
Come and see houses in Australia it’s quite opposite 😂
Meticulous is the word of the day. This dialog is annoying and machine-generated.
Great
I should imagine that the neighbours were pleased with this structure. Cutting out their sunlight and views
sounds like the description working on a cruise ship .... meticulously, stability ------------------------ so very precise work😂one mistake you've got 2 more warninig and you retired early
the dutch sure know how to build...they are experts in prefab building
Its not a new system..it was in mexico 100 years ago.
@@sqnhunter we mostly use prefeb elements for industrial buildings, not for residential construction but we now build more and more prefeb modular homes.
Без никакъв фундамент?
Prefab building's are back never worked before and they won't work again🎉
Thise walls are dangerous.. just glued? No vertical steel frame nor interlocks. Once earthquake strikes those blocks.. big blocks will fall over you.
Карточный домик на клею если толька бесплатно! То можно, а так нет ненадо 🥴🤢
по уровню интеллекта можно сразу догадаться из какой ты страны....
@@YuiSiPinIII Ну Интелектуал!?
After i see this south east Asia standard concrete home more rigid than this..maybe the designer graduate from adacadabra university
Dziwne,ten "dom" nie został na trwałe przytwierdzony do grunty.W praktyce tylko na nim leży. Nie posiada fundamentów.W Polsce tak nie budujemy nawet wiat śmietnikowych czy garażowych. Ale co kraj to obyczaj.
As a layperson, but very involved DIY homeowner, I have some mixed feelings. Obviously, I have no background arguing with building engineers. Still, I trust prefab homes made of wood will perform better as far as insulation goes, as well as even stability. I also don't understand why the floor was left seemingly un-insulated (I get those were hollow beams, but still). Moreover, since those beams were hollow (and given they were insulated from below), they could have been connected to warm air floor heating, alike the Romans had. The crawl space seem to have been enclosed, which may provide insulation, yet being fully closed it requires forced venting, which may work out to be a failure point at some point in the future. And once it fails, it can cause problems with mold, at least according to what I heard. All in all, I am very interested in this sort of stuff, but I have seen other construction methods that I find far more convincing.
Under the hollow beams on the ground floor there s a crawlspace for plumbing and stuf.
On top of the hollowbeams there s rebar witcf some electric conduct and a layer of concreet. On top of that concreet there is more insulation, on top of that insulation there will be floorheating system layed into mud.
On the first floor its the same only there will be some plumbing and as u call hvac system layed onto the hollow pipes in the concreet for the groundfloor.
This hvac system ia a push pull system where one side of the house gives warmed fresh air into the hous and on the other side it will suck old air out. So this is basicly a ventilation with no cold air.
On the outside u see the first walls and insulation, what u dont see is a layer of bricks after that infront of this insulation.
These house last hundreds and hundreds of years with some maintenance ofc. And is air thight.
non isolated floor??
The 2 floors look different. I think there is 5-6 inches of insulation under the bottom slabs, whereas the top floor is not as thick.
Hah, we're used to stick and frame construction in the U.S..... We build just about anything with 2x4s and 2x6s and sheet rock. Then we make it look nice and market it like it's the 9th world wonder and charge out of the azz for it. And if we're lucky It may last us 70-80 years. This kind of house would cost 3-4x what we pay in the U.S. for a house of the same dimensions.
So, not really that incredible. Pretty much all standard construction techniques, with the addition of pre-fabricated sections to speed the construction. The plethora of platitudes was the only incredible thing I noticed. I mean, how difficult is it to build a brick wall if you're a proficient bricklayer, especially if you're provided pre-fabricated lintel sections. It's just a very common house build these days.
the narrator's tone is so dramatic... I thought they put foundation for another Burj Khalifa or something...
12:48 Reproduction process?
Американцы изобрели панельное строительство.
По номерным знакам машин видно что это где-то в Европе (Англия или Голландия) так что нет американцы всё ещё строят из говна и палок
House for ten days ? No thanks !
You can"t say much about it. It is a fast 'snelbouw' way of building with a logic coming from industrial building. They work backwards. Only the future will tell if this is ...the future in building. What I do not see is any preparation for all utility canals, I also see much silicones, Silicones and glues do not last. I don't see cavity walls and I am aking myself what the K-value is. It ain't good to seal completely a building that cannot breathe anymore. I will wait and see what it brings. I also do not like putting that weight on hollow vaults instead of on a reinforced concrete slab. Anyways engineers will have calculated that it will hold. It is a nice house.
Under the hollow beams on the ground floor there s a crawlspace for plumbing and stuf.
On top of the hollowbeams there s rebar witcf some electric conduct and a layer of concreet. On top of that concreet there is more insulation, on top of that insulation there will be floorheating system layed into mud.
On the first floor its the same only there will be plumbing and as u call hvac system layed onto the hollow pipes in the concreet for the groundfloor.
This hvac system ia a push pull system where one side of the house gives warmed fresh air into the hous and on the other side it will suck old air out. So this is basicly a ventilation with no cold air.
On the outside u see the first walls and insulation, what u dont see is a layer of bricks after that infront of this insulation.
These house last hundreds and hundreds of years with some maintenance ofc. And ar air thight with pre heated fresh air.
This kinda house is what we call a zero on meter house which means that it will almost coast nothing to keep it on temp because of the insulation and heating system
❤❤❤❤🎉
In the beginning I thought they are going to build 5 store building with all the equipment, resources and amount of work used. I've seen 2 guys build nicer house than this and I bet it was technologically not weaker but at least 10 times cheaper.
Dutch houses are build to survive storms end floods. The stricktest rules in the world.
😮kein betonfundament! Kein ringanker!!! Wie soll das denn halten. Setzung im Boden!!
Cimientos: unos cuantos postes de medio metro de profundidad... Eso no es "modernidad", es una chapuza
What's with the pompous cliches about the dedication and professionalism of the skilled workers? Its a house being constructed, not a speech to the nation....
a House that weights Gazillion tons just to make 2 floors and 100 sq meters of living space . NOPE !
Аж смотреть противно... Нам до такого лет сто... К сожалению
The story is AI and the voice is AI. I bed 10000 euro on it
Get rid of robot voiceover it’s so irritating and not needed
Okay. aI stop this firstly look at the brick. Work the facade of the house the bric arch wrongly build please find references on the old Italian or French house
❤❤❤🫶👍🏼👍🏼🫶🫶🫶🫶👌🏼🤞🏼🕺🏼👌
Modern monstrosity.
Obnoxious slathering of florid blather...yecch....
Poor weak house, it'll not sustain harsh weather. It'll not even last 40 or 50 years.
Never had to listen so much crap about building a pre-fab
too modern.
You added in so many pointless words in every sentence! No need
What a nonsens. That must be an AI generated commentary. Nonsense.
No tiene cimentacion,después vuelan😮
very annoying commentary
ooo my god what modern .....blabla bla normal house bild !!!!!!!!!!!!
I have no idea why the narration in this video made me go nuts!!! Damn!!!! Annoying !!!!
🏗️🕌🏨🕌🏨🕌🏨
🏗️🕌🕌🕌🕌🕌