Extreme Recycling - Cardboard Buildings 170
Xenographic writes: "Apparently, someone in the UK got the idea to build a school entirely out of cardboard and Westborough Primary School decided to implement it. The students are even recycling their trash to help construction!"
recycled? (Score:1)
nothing new (Score:2, Informative)
Re:nothing new (Score:2)
I can see the slogan now... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I can see the slogan now... (Score:1)
Re:I can see the slogan now... (Score:1)
Buildings cheap enough that a giant monster can knock them down everyday and still be able to rebuild the entire city by tomorrow's episode.
Re:With recent events... (Score:1)
Re:With recent events... (Score:2)
Cardboard and the food chain (Score:1, Insightful)
Cardboard is a great way to recycle and support lower life forms.
Re:Cardboard and the food chain (Score:5, Informative)
The strength tests they used were the following: (1) The strongest man in Great Britain took a sledge hammer to one of the tubes. It was only slightly dented. I'd imagine Lumber acts the same way when he takes a sledge hammer to it. (2) They built a test bridge out of the material, and drove a 1 ton van onto it, which did not dent at all.
The fire test involved taking a flame thrower to untreated and treated cardboard. The untreated burned pretty good, but the treated charred, but remained physically mostly in tact (similar to lumber). Don't expect it to survive burning jet fuel, but it should do okay.
The water test involved the local fire department hosing the place down with fire hoses. The inside remained dry, with no leaks or damp spots.
However, its life is only expected to be 20 years. Which really isn't that bad, for a recycable building.
Re:Cardboard and the food chain (Score:1)
seems to back him up, though I agree, I can't seem to find this information on the project's site.. didn't look too hard tho.
Re:Cardboard and the food chain (Score:1, Funny)
But now the terrorists can apply their cardboard cutters directly to the building instead of doing all that dance with the planes...
Other Regs (Score:1, Troll)
although this has become common in recent years
Well... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Well... (Score:1)
Fire drills (Score:1)
Re:Fire drills (Score:1)
If there's a fire, I suspect someone could cut or punch a hole in the back wall and just stroll on out.
Re:Fire drills (Score:1)
Re:Fire drills (Score:1)
Hrm.... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Hrm.... (Score:2)
Re:Hrm.... (Score:2)
I note that the school isn't entirely cardboard: there is timber framing, and the tubes are capped by steel doohickeys. Yes, that is the construction-trades technical term for them.
Re:Hrm.... (Score:1)
Re:Hrm.... (Score:1)
If it did, it doesn't anymore: Posted by michael on Saturday October 06, @11:48PM
No, wrong article... (Score:1)
Re:you're an idiot (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Hrm.... (Score:1)
Oh, no, look up at the sky (Score:1)
I'm curious to see what sort of solution the engineers have in tackling one of nature's most destructive forces: the thunderstorm.
DATE of press-release.... (Score:2, Funny)
I wonder why does
jokes (?) as news?
Paul
I dunno about this (Score:1)
Re:I dunno about this (Score:1)
Coming Soon: A New Form of Vandalism (Score:2)
"Attention students, school is cancelled because the classroom has melted."
- JoeShmoe
Very dated (Score:3, Informative)
Try browsing through the parent site [cardboardschool.co.uk].
Here is an article [bbc.co.uk] from the BBC about it dated March 21, 2001.
Re:Very dated (Score:1)
Kansas weather (Score:2)
Re:Kansas weather (Score:1)
Re:Kansas weather (Score:1)
Re:Kansas weather (Score:2)
Alternative building materials... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:BFD (Score:2, Interesting)
...What is CAT's next great innovation?...
You're missing the point of the project, this bunch of hippies that missed out on the 60-70's set out to experiment with various forms of 'alternative' techonology, turning a former slate slag strewn hill into a proof of concept, educating the public that some iffy notion of being 'green' is far from unrealistic and pointless. Their inovation is education. Much of 'their' technology is stuff that has been imported from third world countries which lack the luxury of the wests disposable lifestyle.
More cardboard buildings! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:More cardboard buildings! (Score:1)
Re:More cardboard buildings! (Score:1)
Styrofoam Buildings.... (Score:1)
Re:Styrofoam Buildings.... (Score:1)
No more snow days! (Score:1)
Hmm...... (Score:1)
It was always fun trying to study english right next to a rather loud acting class.
Cardboard Is Big Business (Score:1)
(and now an attempt to avoid the lameness filter. yeah, yeah, i could figure out how to do it exactly but i'm too lazy to read the code)
And end to grade school pollock jokes ... (Score:4, Funny)
"Did you hear the one about the brits who made a cardboard school ?"
Have We Not Learned From ILC's Anton Jackson? (Score:1)
Ever see in living color?
Err... (Score:1)
Fire Hazard: Least of the problems. (Score:1, Informative)
Compressed cardboard is more dense than some types of wood. Also, it lacks a lot of the natural resins of say birch or pine. Pine tar is *very* flammable mind you.
Have you ever tried burning heavy gauge cardboard or say a phonebook? it doesnt work very well unless you shred it.
The parts of such a building vulnerable to flame are the honeycomb wafers used for insulation. Of course, most materials become somewhat flammable if you make them thin enough.
That was why asbestos seemed like such a good deal. Any ways the point is moot, shredded cardboard is *commonly* used as insulation these days. Its a whole lot easer to work with than fiberglass.
Problems in the Cardboard Age (Score:5, Funny)
Jimmy continued silently staring at the cardboard floor, kicking impatiently at the corrogated ridges under his feet showing through after three months of moderate traffic.
"Jimmy?"
Jimmy looked up, feigning a look of innocence.
"You know matches, lighters and magnifying glasses were banned after we lost the North wing."
Pictures of the completed building (Score:4, Informative)
Of particular interest to the masses is this http://www.cardboardschool.co.uk/content/siteim/A
Re:Pictures of the completed building (Score:1)
Re:Pictures of the completed building (Score:1)
Absolutely! Now if we can only get Harvey Nik's interested in this, we would at last have somewhere to feel unguilty!
I mean, at long last, we could go shopping in our 3 litre intercooled turbocharged Japanese four-wheel-drives to actively support the use of renewable resources!
Now that would just be the coolest thing for we ABC1s to do, wouldn't it? I mean, it's even better than voting for Tony's NewLabour!
come on guys, get with the times! (Score:2, Funny)
Come on, it's not "fire retardant" it's "thermally challenged".
Not very PC if you ask me =P
Re:come on guys, get with the times! (Score:1)
I know, I know... it's "Remedial" burning class.
celuloid is celuloid. (Score:2)
the soundtrack plays constantly, really heady sweeping "end-of-the-world"symphonic stuff. plays when you are paused. it was playing when i took a break and decided to check out
there is nothing crazy or edgy about useing processed paper as a building material. i think it's a capitol idea.
People are not learning from the past (Score:2, Interesting)
Such schools might be cheap building, but in the long run they have heavy maintenance... And might also become dangerous if not permanently monitored.
Make your choice !
20 year lifespan (Score:1)
Other alternatives (Score:1)
now we know... (Score:2)
big bad wolf (Score:1)
a moral story... (Score:1)
Sticky backed plastic and a pair of Vals knickers (Score:1)
Maybe I'm a tiny bit cynical, but.... (Score:2, Informative)
3 pigs. (Score:1)
april... (Score:1)
This is an april fools, and an OLD one too!
I'm surprised at how narrowminded /. readers are. (Score:2, Insightful)
You guys call yourself forward thinking? Sure, if it was something about TiVo, or the latest Quake knockoff, I'm sure you'd be all over it, but try to stretch your minds a little.
Yes, it's cardboard. And as I seem to have to point out to every single person who makes a rudimentary crack about cardboard melting when it gets wet: Milk cartons are made out of cardboard. They hold liquid for weeks at a time! This is not rocket science, people. It's design science.
I have been looking at cardboard as a building material since about 1990. It works. It's cheap. It can be made to withstand many of the stresses of the environment. (My design professor, Harold Cohen, built untreated cardboard domes in the 1960's that sat out for a year in the rain and snow of Southern Illinois. They didn't melt. They worked just fine.)
I've worked with friends to design low-cost emergency shelters for disaster relief and the homeless. And just like all of you, most of them couldn't get past the idea of cardboard melting. So I went with a corrugated plastic material, made just like cardboard, but made from milk-bottle HDPE type-2 plastic. Totally recyclable, and totally waterproof. (Once again, designed to hold milk for weeks, just like the cardboard cartons. :-) ) You can find images of the dome-building
party we held at my house in 1998 here [sculptors.com]
and can see some of the results. This dome was about 12' in diameter and 5' high at the center. It was a 1/2 to 1/3 scale model of what we'd deploy to disaster victims or the homeless. The total cost of materials was about US $50.
Standard building materials for housing cost about US $110 per square foot of area covered. This corrugated plastic drops the price down to US $0.50-$1.00 per square foot covered. If you use cardboard, that price falls another order of magnitude to about US $0.05-$0.10 per square foot covered. So you see, it's not just eco-friendly, and it's not just recyclable. It's also up to 1100 times cheaper than doing it the old-fashioned way. So even if it did wear out after 3 months, as one pundit wrote in these comments, you could keep replacing the building for about 400 years for the same cost. Which is far more than a standard school will last.
-Pat
Re:I'm surprised at how narrowminded /. readers ar (Score:2)
But what about the cost of the construction workers? The building materials are usually not the largest cost for the construction of a building. Given this is specialized construction, I am sure the number of construction companies able to build these structures are few and expensive. Would the school district want to pay to have the schools torn down and rebuilt every 20 years?
That's assuming that they last 20 years. What are they doing to resist being damaged due to vandalism? The biggest problem will not be the weather, but juvenille delinquents scarring the external shell causing water to enter and weaken the structure. A Polish friend of mine said that at one time vehicles in his country had bodies made of heavy cardboard/pressboard coated with enamel paint. It was ok until the paint cracked and water seeped in and caused it to rot and smell. He said he once saw a guy get so mad at his rotting car that he put his fists and feet through it and ripped it apart.
Reality check (Score:2)
It's genuine (Score:1)
old school (Score:1)
at the time, I was just amazed that he washed so many cans, and didn't crush them all up in the process.
Oh great. (Score:2)
Giant children with stilts (Score:1)
Buckminster Fuller Did This in 1959 (Score:1)
Difficult Getting US Approval (Score:1)
zoolander! (Score:1)
How can the kids expect to learn if the building can't even support their weight?
I can see it now... (Score:1)
-Paul
www.lpbk.net [lpbk.net] - It might be in bad taste, but come on... how many of you thought it too?
Re:recycling (Score:2, Offtopic)
In order to prepare for the coming hunting season, I recycled the Windows2000 manuals, license, and CD that came with my laptop into clay pigeons at the sand pits this month with my rifle.
The cheesy book looked exploded into what looked like a thousand feathers of pages. The license required me to wad it up in a ball to throw it and was a difficult target, but it met its demise.
Only problem was shooting the CD. Kept missing the damn thing. When it did get hit, it would not shatter. Only a tiny hole. Emptied a dozen boxes of shells on the CD alone.
Re:recycling (Score:2)
Hmmm, rifle shells are a buck or so apiece... So, congratulations - you managed to spend nearly as much to shoot the CD as Windows2000 cost you.
Using a microwave oven would have been less expensive.
Re:recycling (Score:2)
It may have cost me more to own W2K...
Re: (Score:1)