Showing posts with label disaster relief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disaster relief. Show all posts

Beautiful Bamboo Living Houses Take Two Days to Build

Saturday, August 14, 2010


Beautiful Bamboo Living Houses Take Two Days to Build

Bamboo Hawaii House, Bamboo living, prefab bamboo house, hawaii 
prefab, sustainable design, green design, green building, green 
architecture
Our fascination with prefab buildings knows no bounds — but add bamboo to the mix and you’ve really got our attention. These two beautiful houses in Hawaii were recently built using bamboo as the main building material. The total construction time? Two days.
The Hawaiian houses were designed by David Sands of Bamboo Living Homes. The owners decided on Bamboo because it is lightweight, incredibly strong, and a rapidly renewable material. The company designed the houses, assembled them in Vietnam, and then shipped them to Hawaii to be set up on-site. The company has been building bamboo houses for 14 years, but these two were by far the fastest builds they’ve every assembled.
Sustainably-sourced bamboo is one of the best green building materials around. It’s as strong as timber, grows quicker, and looks fantastic. Combining this versatile material with prefab construction strikes us as a great green idea

Shipping Container Housing/ Building

Prefab Housing Pyramid Puts Students in a (Container) Box

by Jorge Chapa
green design, shipping container housing, shipping container prefab, shipping container architecture, student container housing, sustainable design, eco design, container housing, student housing, green architecture, green container housing, sustainable housing, eco housing, green design, green architecture, eco architecture
From its modular modern design to its shipping container components, Olgga’s student housing complex struck us as a pitch perfect project for prefab friday. The French architecture firm designed the complex to be constructed from 100 repurposed shipping containers. Talk about putting your students in a box!
green design, shipping container housing, shipping container prefab, shipping container architecture, student container housing, sustainable design, eco design, container housing, student housing, green architecture, green container housing, sustainable housing, eco housing, green design, green architecture, eco architecture
The project was developed for a contest promoted by the Centre régional des œuvres universitaires et scolaires (CROUS) of Haute Normandie (an administrator of student assistance in France. The contest challenged architects to explore creative designs for student housing complexes that utilize shipping containers, with the aim of creating the first such structure in the country.
Olgga came in second place with their design, which comprises 2,900 square meters and would cost around 4.5 million euros. Each container is a room for one student, complete with a study area, bathroom, and living room. For more amazing shipping container abodes, check out Flavorwire’s assortment here.
+ Olgga Architects

Filtered Water In 2 Minutes with New UV Light Bottle Invention

Filtered Water In 2 Minutes with New UV Light Bottle Invention

by Jaymi Heimbuch
pure water bottle image
Image via James Dyson Award
Most portable water filters use carbon filters, special membranes with microscopic openings, or chemicals like chlorine or iodine to clean the water and make it save for drinking. However, one of the best systems for purifying water is actually with ultraviolet light. But how do you get an ultraviolet light purification system into a small portable water bottle that can be used anywhere? One design and technology graduate has figured it out, and already won the UK branch of the prestigious James Dyson Award for his invention.
pure water bottle image
According to BBC, Timothy Whitehead, a graduate from Loughborough University, came up with the idea for the bottle while traveling in Zambia. Rather than using chlorine or iodine tabs which take half an hour to work and leave a gross taste in the water, this new bottle first filters particles four microns or larger from the water, then uses ultraviolet light (powered by wind-up) to kill 99.9% of bacteria and viruses. All within two minutes and all without altering the taste.
The Pure bottle is already quite advanced in the development process, including an "original filter designed which filters any soiled water down to 4 micron in particle size (fully scientifically proven); a wind-up Ultra violet light system has been produced, including a custom designed PCB to monitor winding frequency and to give user feedback when the water is sterile. The casing has been designed for both prototype production and manufacture."
Now that the invention has proven itself in the UK, it will face off with other finalists from around the world in October.

Sustainable Colorado Copyright © 2009 Designed by Ipietoon Blogger Template for Bie Blogger Template Vector by DaPino