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Eco-materials in building design

AliceW787

Registered User
Joined
Sep 26, 2023
Messages
1
Location
New York
I'm exploring the integration of sustainable and eco-friendly materials in modern building designs and would love to hear your experiences and insights! Which materials have you found to be most effective and aesthetically pleasing? How do you balance sustainability with durability and cost?
 
An eco-friendly approach to the built environment would include methods and materials that are meant to last a few centuries as opposed to the few decades we achieve now. That computes to a 100% savings of resources and a 100% reduction in carbon footprint.

To be honest, I don’t buy into the climate change bugaboo. While there’s facets of the green war that make sense from a practical perspective, mankind can’t take credit for changing the climate. The effort misses the point and falls short of substantive reform.

Consumerism is the the leading ill behind the worlds problems. The Atlantic garbage patch is there because humans have too many choices. Look at the toothpaste aisle at CVS. Ask yourself why there is a “toothpaste aisle”…. Shouldn’t a toothpaste shelf suffice?

Consider the auto industry. New models come out every year. The money spent on that is enormous. Just the marketing budget could have driven science with a result being cars that get hundreds of miles per gallon, don’t pollute, never crash and last forever.

Something as simple as a partnership with the people that made pay phones could have led to bulletproof cars.
 
Check out the 500 year wall here - https://buildingscience.com/documents/insights/bsi-001-the-perfect-wall

The most sustainable building materials are still concrete and wood. Wood literally grows on trees, and the wood industry replants the trees to keep feeding the industry.

Concrete used properly should last forever - if you don't have to rebuild it, there is no further issues.
 
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