Inhabitat











October 11, 2007

HEINEKEN WOBO: The brick that holds beer

by Ali Kriscenski

WOBO, world bottle, Heineken, John Habraken, Rinus van den Berg, Alfred Heineken, Netherlands, Amsterdam, upcycling, cradle to cradle, Garbage Building, Martin Pawley, wobo_5.jpg

Upcycling is a 21st century term, coined by Cradle to Cradle authors William McDonough and Michael Braungart, but the idea of turning waste into useful products came to life brilliantly in 1963 with the Heineken WOBO (world bottle). Envisioned by beer brewer Alfred Heineken and designed by Dutch architect John Habraken, the “brick that holds beer” was ahead of its ecodesign time, letting beer lovers and builders alike drink and design all in one sitting.


WOBO, world bottle, Heineken, John Habraken, Rinus van den Berg, Alfred Heineken, Netherlands, Amsterdam, upcycling, cradle to cradle, Garbage Building, Martin Pawley, wobo_1.jpg

Mr. Heineken’s idea came after a visit to the Caribbean where he saw two problems: beaches littered with bottles and a lack of affordable building materials. The WOBO became his vision to solve both the recycling and housing challenges that he had witnessed on the islands.

The final WOBO design came in two sizes - 350 and 500 mm versions that were meant to lay horizontally, interlock and layout in the same manner as ‘brick and mortar’ construction. One production run in 1963 yielded 100,000 bottles some of which were used to build a small shed on Mr. Heineken’s estate in Noordwijk, Netherlands. One of the construction challenges “was to find a way in which corners and openings could be made without cutting bottles,” said Mr. Habraken.

Despite the success of the first “world bottle” project, the Heineken brewery didn’t support the WOBO and the idea stalled. Interest was reignited in 1975 when Martin Pawley published Garbage Housing which included the chapter ‘WOBO: a new kind of message in a bottle.’ Heineken once again approached Habraken who teamed up with designer Rinus van den Berg and designed a building with oil drums for columns, Volkswagen bus tops for roof and the WOBO bottles for walls, but the structure was never built.

Today, the shed at the Heineken estate and a wall made of WOBO at the Heineken Museum in Amsterdam are the only structures where the ‘beer brick’ was used. As to the remaining WOBO’s it’s not clear how many exist, or where, but the idea, even some four decades later, remains a lasting example in end-use innovation.

Heineken International
Heineken Museum
John Habraken

Via Archinect

WOBO, world bottle, Heineken, John Habraken, Rinus van den Berg, Alfred Heineken, Netherlands, Amsterdam, upcycling, cradle to cradle, Garbage Building, Martin Pawley, wobo_2.jpg

WOBO, world bottle, Heineken, John Habraken, Rinus van den Berg, Alfred Heineken, Netherlands, Amsterdam, upcycling, cradle to cradle, Garbage Building, Martin Pawley, wobo_3.jpg

51 Responses to “HEINEKEN WOBO: The brick that holds beer”

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RaymaN Says:
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Hey, cool idea! ;)

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Hmmmmm Says:
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What a beautiful and forward thinking product. I feel like drinking a Heiniken right now to celebrate.
I would love to come across an old stash of thoses bottles and build something.

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[…] Beer Bottle Brick Published October 11th, 2007 Environment / Sustainability How come this idea never took off, check out this 1963 Heineken WOBO bottle.  Add mortor and you can stack this like a brick wall.  It’s a real shame that Heineken didn’t develope this further.  From inhabitat.com […]

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According to Pawley’s “Garbage Housing,” 100,000 bottles were made. The bottles were discontinued because there was fear that they didn’t produce a safe and reliable enough structure. Yes, it really is too bad that this idea wasn’t developed further. Long before there was Cradle to Cradle, and its fantasies of green capitalism, there was Pawley’s notion of Secondary Use (a bit more realistic then and now) - every product would be made so that it could have a secondary use - the WOBO is one of the greatest examples of this and is truly an enduring classic of this way of thinking.

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Tim Says:
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surely every country has building regulations!? why should practical idealism have to be limited by end use doubts? Isn’t that the responsibility of the end-user? I’m sure I could build a deadly structure out of BHP steel and Scandenavian Hardwood… but there ain’t nothin wrong with the raw.

Any way we can get some marketing hype going to revisit some of these ideas??? It doesn’t have to be anything other than a limited run… the publicity would be massive. Why don’t PR and marketing people read these sites…. the world is drooling over eco-friendly products and the world of marketing still wants to sell landfill. Get with the times folks, or next years kids will have your jobs.

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Tim Says:
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okay and as much as that ‘Achoholic’s beach house’ picture is cute and inspiriing… I don’t think its really the point… imagine building your shower screen out of it, Or a feature wall! Or building sections into your swimming pool out of them with lights inside/behind. As a source of glass and architectural inspiration these things are unlimited.

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yanick Says:
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On a similar note, As I was doing research for development work, I read an article about a housing project in Mexico using 2L pop bottle for the walls. The bottle were laid vertically, fixed with mortar and covered with a layer of clay for finish. Those bottle can withstand a lot of pressure and, I suppose, can support roof structure. Another example of secondary use.

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[…] HEINEKEN WOBO: the brick that holds beer Envisioned by beer brewer Alfred Heineken and designed by Dutch architect John Habraken, the “brick that holds beer” was ahead of its ecodesign time, letting beer lovers and builders alike drink and design all in one sitting…read more at Inhabitat […]

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Greg Says:
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Breathtaking, curious, and ingenious.

I love this.

The bottles are interesting in and of themselves, as well.

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Ali Says:
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Any way we can petition Heineken to bring these back???

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Wendy Says:
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I love the bottles too. I think I saw them first in a GREAT book called Paper or Plastic. Similar but not the same use of recycled bottles (wine) in building can be seen at: http://www.jakeshotel.com/ They use beautiful multi-colored bottles in walls and headboards etc. Gorgeous!

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Mikeee Says:
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I know it wouldn’t be as appealing as stacked empty WOBOs like in the picture above, but I’d guess that filling up the bottles with cement/concrete and THEN using them to build the house would provide the necessary stability?

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Yannick - the project with the bottles was in Monterrey (Mexico) and was done by a group I work with from time to time called Learning Site: http://www.learningsite.info. The [Collected Material Dwelling #002] looked at several factors in the occupied outer areas of Monterrey: there was tons of trash strewn all over the area, when the house was built there was no infrastructure for recycling plastic bottles, people in the area were making their houses and an economy out picking up trash… we incorporated all of these factors into making the six-sided house. An overview of the project is hear: http://www.learningsite.info/PETdwelling.htm. We built a model for the house, which has been traveling around in an exhibition called “Beyond Green”. Here is our model - made from plastic bottles woven together with wire and cardboard - all materials from the waste streams of the museum we built the thing in. Here is the link: http://www.learningsite.info/collecteddwellingsmart.htm.

I first saw the WOBO as a kid in the 70s and was mesmerized by it. I think this kind of innovative design will melt the most obstinate people into understanding and getting excited about things like secondary use.

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I forgot… here is the page for our book that documents both houses and some other projects. The book has sold out, but we put the pdf up for free download: http://www.learningsite.info/learningbook001.htm

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jkfan87 Says:
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Tim..do you realize how much weight is exerted onto objects in a swimming pool?

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Yes, great.

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Leon Says:
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Isn’t there a beer brand called “BRICK”. Have caps that screw back on for better insulation,

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Joel Says:
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Way ahead of its time.

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Fred Glisan Says:
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Cool. It’s like LEGOS for alcoholics.

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Considering the way Heineken treat their staff in Cambodia (see: http://www.beergirls.org/), maybe they are not as altruistic as their PR machine would like you to think.

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Doug Lucchetti Says:
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Glass, for all its usefullness and ubiquity, is widely overlooked for its potential to enhance our lives in many ways and the building block bottle is just one of them…heineken should have considered using additional colors and expanded the kinds of building components that its packaging suggests. And I should add, that the very first time this idea came across my awareness was back in the late 60s when a dairy suggested the same design application for their milk bottles…see, it’s not just about some commenters phobia about alcohol.

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its different!

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Awesome! I think those bottles are great. I love the “grenade” big huge keg cans too.
Rep the brand,

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I have always been interested in glass in architecture, whether windows or walls, interior divisions or floors. That a consumer products company would, as a by product, create a building material is genius. You have to ask yourself why an idea like this, high end recycling, would not work. But then you just look at the automotive industry and ask yourself why we don’t have $5000 cars in the realm of Rolls Royces, that run on gasoline that gets you 200 mpg. Why have computers dropped down to $500 for a Dell 2 gb laptop and we have expensive, inefficient product polluting the planet?

I’m trying to create paper products with our company here in Paris, Lalande Digital Art Press, that extend the lifetime of a piece of paper, give it sensuality, art and utility. Our “Carte de Rencontre” is a step in that general direction that the H bottle seemed to promise.

Fascinating piece, thank you for writing about it. Love your site. It’s what we need more of…

Best, Matthew Rose / http://lalandedigitalpress.blogspot.com/

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[…] Here’s a clever, and very green idea from Heineken which, unfortunately, arrived in1963, just before the first real green campaigns began. It’s a remarkably simple idea, where each bottle is vaguely brick shaped, and designed in such a way as to link together pretty seamlessly. The purpose was to provide a use for the bottle beyond carrying Heineken’s beer, and to enable people to build with the bottles afterward. I’d rather like a glass wall built out of beer bottles, although it might have been better if they produced the bottles in clear glass as well as green. […]

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[…] write about the environment every day either here, at Greener Assets or Inhabitat. I do it for two reasons: because I love to write and because the health of the environment is […]

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[…] produttrice di birra discutibile ma grande macinatrice di eventi e azioni collaterali di marketing, presenta la nuova bottiglia mattone, più bevi e più grande sarà la tua casa per un mondo in cui Barney vive in un palazzo di 16 […]

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Paul Grove Says:
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I’m from South Africa - home of SAB- Miller. We have a chronic housing shortage - this idea would be perfect. Building SQ one beer at a time!

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Neat idea. After drinking about 3 of those, i’m sure i’d be inclined to make something. Then I would probably suffer death by cirrhosis trying to finish my 42 floor boutique hotel.

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[…] Beer Bricks by Heineken (via Inhabitat) […]

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[…] HEINEKEN WOBO: The brick that holds beer (tags: beer environment) […]

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B Says:
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Great idea! I wonder if a brewer with a product that doesn’t taste like skunk urine could take over the project? My husband could build schools.

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pistabaci Says:
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while i think this is one of the coolest things i’ve seen in a while, and i think it was a great idea in the past, i’m not sure that it meets our environmental goals of today. i think we need to figure out a system where the bottles just make their way back into the factory and get refilled (with beer, in this case). we should only have to recycle bottles that are too damaged to be reused. if not broken, a bottle will last quite some time and refilling it would utilize the inherent energy of the bottle all over again. it’s all about closed loops people! ;)

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[…] John Habraken and set out to find a way to make Heineken bottles reusable as building material. The result is an ingenious bottle design: Square, with raised bumps on each side for traction, a short neck and a matching dimple in the […]

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[…] http://www.inhabitat.com Stapelbares Flaschendesign. […]

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[…] Inhabitat | Tags: heineken […]

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victor h. Says:
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Cheers for that!!
Salud por eso!!

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Round Peg Says:
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Why do the bottles need to be specially shaped to be used as building material?: a wall made of ordinary round bottles would need a bit more mortar but be just as doable, and could be made of a mixutre of different bottles, or the builder could choose bottles of different sizes and colours according to the effect he wants, such as how much light comes into the room or the risk of breakage.
As it is, we are told that bottles, like everything else, can be used just once before being thrown away and becoming a liablity. The best way to use used bottles is to use them as bottles.

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[…] Inhabitat » HEINEKEN WOBO: The brick that holds beer. a cradle to cradle idea from the 70s. […]

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Eric Says:
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I found a snipit of an article for a WOBO bottle building on the back cover of an old Fine Homebuilding issue (December 1986/January 1987)…. just a few days after someone sent me this Inhabitat article.

You can check it out here: http://eyecandy-webcandy.blogspot.com/

Keep up the good work,
Eric

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[…] HEINEKEN WOBO: The brick that holds beer […]

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[…] http://www.inhabitat.com Stapelbares Flaschendesign. Posted by admin in Produkt […]

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[…] Source [Inhabitat] […]

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[…] La botella que es ladrillo o el ladrillo que es botella. Ademas te puedes beber el contenidowww.inhabitat.com/2007/10/11/heineken-wobo-the-brick-that-ho… por mimateos hace pocos segundos […]

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ananieto Says:
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Toma inventos

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[…] Inhabitat Posted in […]

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[…] ~|Upcylcing I can deal with… build me a Heineken house. […]

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Anonymous Says:
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[…] “What are some others ways I can help the planet by binge drinking?” The solution: the Heineken Brick. It turns out Alfred Heineken had the idea make a”brick that holds beer” in 1963. He […]

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Adrian Says:
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Does anyone know a company that can make a bottle design for hire? I think this is a great idea but I would try to improve upon it.

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joane doe Says:
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See Ryolite NV. Miners did this in the 19th century.

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