Inhabitat


Plastic Concrete: Building Bricks Made From Landfill Waste

by Trey Farmer, 09/21/09

sustainable design, green design, recycled materials, concrete, cement, henry miller, concrete thinking for a sustainable world, building materials

Recent RPI Masters of Architecture graduate Henry Miller has devised a way to reuse waste plastic as an aggregate in cement, circumventing the energy-intensive process of plastic recycling. By grinding up landfill-bound plastic and mixing it with portland cement, Miller was able to create a material just as strong as traditional concrete made with mined aggregate. The ingenious solution netted miller first place in the “Component Category” of the second annual Concrete Thinking for a Sustainable World competition.

sustainable design, green design, recycled materials, concrete, cement, henry miller, concrete thinking for a sustainable world, building materials

Using recycled materials is so hot right now, but using them as aggregate is hotter than Hansel in a black shirt on a summer Sunday. While living in Albany, Miller saw many areas cut their plastic recycling programs for the cheaper (now) solution of landfills, and noticed the astounding number of brownfield sites that were simply being abandoned. Miller’s idea: Why not use plastic waste as an aggregate in concrete and create a more sensible product. By mixing together ground-up plastic with cement and soil reclaimed from the brownfields, Miller was able to create a material just as strong as conventional concrete.

The Concrete Thinking for a Sustainable World competition only asked students to conceptualize a design, but Miller he was not satisfied with a mere idea. He actually used his plastic concrete to build a screen and a wall. In doing so he showed that his ideas were viable alternatives to the status quo and that there was no excuse to merely fall in line.

Describing his project, Henry Louis Miller states: “Recycling plastics is a difficult, energy intensive process, and yields a product that is inferior to the virgin material. I have researched the possibility of using granulated, post consumer waste plastics as the aggregate in concrete. In this application, unlike plastics can be universally mixed with no adverse affects, heat driven re-amalgamation is not required, and my early test results show the resulting product is as strong as conventional concrete mixes (between 3000 and 5000psi.) As a result of using plastic rather than conventional aggregate, the mining of new material to serve as aggregate is not necessary.”

+ Concrete Thinking for a Sustainable World Competition

+ RPI’s Masters of Architecture

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5 Responses to “Plastic Concrete: Building Bricks Made From Landfill Waste”

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Bman Says:

I wonder what the difference is in weight compared to traditional concrete? And what about R-value?

I hope he pursues this viable idea and we see it on the market in the near future. The fact is, we produce way to much plastic, making it one of our top waste products and a total blight to nature.

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jkmcf Says:

Beyond 2000 showcased something like this back in the 90s. Of course the developer was in Australia and I haven’t heard of it catching on here.

seamusdubh

So if the new structure is mostly a polymer instead of a mineral. How fire resistant is it now?
Beyond the basic durability and structural advantages that come from mineral, stone, brick, and concrete construction. You have the excellent thermal properties that come with it. For some reason I envision buildings going up like roman candles that are built this way.

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h3 Says:

This is possible now and is being used now. The problem with this product is that it is unable used on the ground, because the granulated plastic leaches into the environment. Big no no with the EPA.

Kelly_McGinnis

Henry Miller, designer of the product discussed here, was the winner of the Portland Cement Association’s 2007 Student Design Competition. The Student Design Competition challenges architect students to think outside of the box and come up with innovative and creative design solutions and products. Henry did just that with his concept of a concrete block made with plastic that would otherwise go into a landfill. Although some of the concerns voiced here about the feasibility of the product are valid and would need to be researched, the bricks are an excellent example of using portland cement to neutralize the negative characteristics of other materials. More on the awards at http://www.cement.org/newsroom/2007_Student_Winners.asp

Kelly McGinnis
Coordinator – Sustainable Development
PCA

 

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