Those computerized cutting machines made that building tech all possible w/c is definitely very ideal for temporary building structures (very decent and stylish living spaces, those), and perhaps those can be easily dismantled whenever anticipating strong storms.
Weight of the house? The gravity kept the house in one piece because of the gravitational pull to the core of the earth which is down. Because of this, all the blocks are interlock with each other. This prevent them from swaying to the left or right because the storm have to move the entire house to the side to actually blown it off. So once it's being constructed, it would be a Single house rather than parts of them sticking out to the side.
@@nntflow7058 I'm guessing that you don't realize cork is extremely lightweight. Winds would tear this thing apart from top to bottom with out the pieces being glued or taped together. Then the weight of the entire house would come into play.
@@dweuromaxx The way the cork can be formed into any block shape to makes forms and u still try to mimic a brick house how has the human imagination become so dull
Those computerized cutting machines made that building tech all possible w/c is definitely very ideal for temporary building structures (very decent and stylish living spaces, those), and perhaps those can be easily dismantled whenever anticipating strong storms.
Child... "dad, I accidently put a hole on the wall."
Dad....."put a cork in it."
Super
What did you use for the structure, cork? How does it respond to earthquake and fire?
Take a piece of cork and try to burn it. Depending on the quality of cork, you will be amazed how well it resists fire.
Portuguese Cork nice! I’m from Portugal 😉
If it's only held together by gravity, what's keeping it standing in a strong storm? That's my main concern.
Just what I was thinking! No adhesives or nails or screws its the loveliest death trap you ever seen.
Nothing a bit of duct tape can't fix!
Weight of the house?
The gravity kept the house in one piece because of the gravitational pull to the core of the earth which is down.
Because of this, all the blocks are interlock with each other. This prevent them from swaying to the left or right because the storm have to move the entire house to the side to actually blown it off.
So once it's being constructed, it would be a Single house rather than parts of them sticking out to the side.
@@nntflow7058 I'm guessing that you don't realize cork is extremely lightweight. Winds would tear this thing apart from top to bottom with out the pieces being glued or taped together. Then the weight of the entire house would come into play.
Hi, I would like to have the contact of the architect, could you help me with that?
Looks clapped
@kingothenattys You think it looks like a collapsible camping cup? 😉😁
@@dweuromaxx The way the cork can be formed into any block shape to makes forms and u still try to mimic a brick house how has the human imagination become so dull
1 kilo-9euro
🇵🇹👍🏻