Posted to alt.home.repair
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Concrete tents - easy to build they say.
On Jun 17, 9:29*am, willshak wrote:
The Daring Dufas wrote the following:
On 6/16/2011 10:44 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Jun 16, 11:20 am, The Daring
wrote:
On 6/15/2011 2:29 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Jun 14, 11:27 pm, Harry * *wrote:
On Jun 14, 10:18 am, * *wrote:
On Jun 14, 6:33 am, "Bob-tx"No Spam no contact * *wrote:
Hope this isn't ot - these could be used for a garage, shop,
chicken house,
etc.
Bob-tx
http://www.wimp.com/concretetents/
But, all that glitters is not plastic - read below
LONDON (AlertNet) - Two British engineers have scooped a global
innovation
award for an inflatable concrete tent, designed for rapid
deployment in
disaster zones, but aid workers differ on its practical viability..
The inventors, Peter Brewin and William Crawford, say they saw a
need for
the structure given the inadequate protection provided by tents
in the
aftermath of disasters such as the Pakistan earthquake.
'With shelter and medical facilities it is possible to rebuild
shattered
communities from day one of a crisis,' they said in a statement.
The tent, made from fabric impregnated with concrete, can be put
up by an
untrained person in 40 minutes. It takes 12 hours for the
concrete to set,
but once done, the tent can last for up to 10 years.
The two designers, both 26, developed so-called Concrete Canvas
during an
industrial engineering course at the Royal College of Art in
London. Their
efforts were rewarded on January 26 at a ceremony in New York
with the
presentation of the top prize at the Saatchi& * *Saatchi Award
for World
Changing Ideas.
Media reports say the invention has attracted interest from the
United
Nations and several international humanitarian agencies.
JUST ADD WATER 'If this was available now, we would buy 10
today,' Monica
Castellarnau, a programme director at M'decins Sans Fronti'res,
was quoted
as saying by Wired News. Its combination of ease of assembly
with durability
has also drawn praise.
The logic of Concrete Canvas is simple. Each unit ' weighing 227
kg (500
lb), making it light enough to transport by plane or truck -
comprises an
inflatable plastic inner bubble, wrapped in the treated fabric
and packed in
a plastic sack.
To deploy the tent, the sack is first filled with 145 litres (32
gallons) of
water, which is absorbed by the cloth. The sack is then cut
open, the tent
is unfolded and the plastic bubble is inflated. The canvas then
moulds
around the bubble and sets to form the solid infrastructure of
the tent.
The finished shelter covers some 16 sq meters (172 sq feet) of
floor space
and the cost per unit is estimated at '1,100 ($2,100).
But some aid officials are not convinced.
'At first sight it looks marvellous,' said Rishi Ramrakha, a
logistics
officer at the British Red Cross Society. 'But the real
practicalities look
a bit difficult.'
According to Ramrakha, there are several central problems.
First, the unit
is too heavy to be carried easily into areas where there might
not be access
for aircraft or trucks. The second is the amount of water needed
to erect
each tent.
'Where are you going to get 145 litres in a disaster zone?' he
asked.
Experts also point out that displaced populations are
accommodated in
temporary shelter because they will eventually be encouraged
either to go
back to where they came from, or to make homes and a new life in
a better
place.
The construction of permanent structures, particularly in
conflict zones,
could hamper that process, they say.
The article says "To deploy the tent, the sack is first filled with
145 litres (32 gallons) of *water, which is absorbed by the
cloth. The
sack is then cut open, the tent is unfolded and the plastic
bubble is
inflated"
The video says the tent is inflated first then saturated with water.
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