The objective is to construct a classroom that will hold approximately 25 students under the age of 10. The classroom will be constructed using primarily locally sourced materials and will explore alternative building methods. The classroom be at least equally as durable as with conventional construction methods and will be cost efficient.
Contenido
Background
Las Malvinas II is a community in Santo Domingo Norte. Santo Domingo is the capital city of the Dominican Republic. There are more than 150 families who live in this semi-rural setting, situated next to the Isabella River. By a vote of hands, the community decided that the project they want to collaborate on the most is to add another classroom on to their school using alternative construction methods.
As there is an abundance of both plastic bottles and waste paper, the alternative construction methods that are most appropriate are the use of papercrete and ecoladrillo. Papercrete is similar to concrete blocks but are made with recycled paper. Ecoladrillo uses wooden frames, plastic bottles, chicken wire, and concrete in the construction of walls.
Criteria
Criteria | Constraint | Weight |
---|---|---|
Safety | The classroom meets or exceeds local building codes | 10 |
Reproduction Costs | The total cost of construction is less than the cost of traditional construction. | 8 |
Appropriate Materials | Building materials are local, alternatively resourced, and may be easily obtained by the community. | 7 |
Aesthetics | The classroom looks good with the existing school structure while having a unique appearance that draws positive attention to its alternative construction. | 8 |
Ease of Use | The classroom comfortably accommodates the most number of students possible for the given space, up to 35 students. | 7 |
Community Interest | Maximize community involvement to develop their interest in the project, as well as their skills and knowledge necessary to replicate the project later. | 10 |
Research and Development Costs | Spend no more than US$1000 | 5 |
Literature Review
See Literature Review for relevant research completed for this project.
Final Design
The final design is a traditional concrete column-and-beam style structure with alternatively constructed, non load bearing infill. The alternative material used throughout the infill is primarily ecoladrillo. Papercrete is used in a section of one of the windows. Resourced waste wood is used as panels between the beams and roofing that allows for ventilation. The floor is tiled with discarded broken tiles from a factory, using an ancient Roman technique of laying tile floors.
Ecoladrillo
Ecoladrillo is made from clean plastic bottles and trash, wood, chicken wire, and plaster. The plastic bottles and trash make up the majority of the wall. Plastic bottles are stuffed with clean non-organic trash and are then stacked into a wooden frame with chicken wire stretched over each face to hold everything together. A plaster is then applied to each face.
If possible, secure wire ties within the structure's columns and beams, spaced ever 20-40 cm. There should be two at each point, with a width just below the width of the wood for the frame (3" space for 2"X4" wood). It is also crucially important to secure wire ties at the corners. All of these ties will be used later to tighten the chicken wire and make it flush with the columns and beams. It improves wall strength, and makes plastering the edges much easier.
Build wooden frame to house ecoladrillo using 2"X4". Sections should be no bigger than 1 meter squared because larger sections make stacking bottles and securing chicken wire more difficult. Using 2"X4" allows for two layers of offset bottles, which increases wall thickness, strength, and insolation. Other sizes of wood may also be used.
Secure one side of the wall with chicken wire using wire ties in the columns and beams and staples in the wood frame. The backside of a hammer can be used to pull chicken wire taught before being secured
Using similar bottles to the rows below, place 2 offset rows of inverted bottles. Their necks should fit in between the necks of the bottles below and stack nicely. It is incredibly important to use similar width bottles in these 4 rows so that their necks fit in between each other. However, a different set of uniform bottles can be used in the next 4 rows.
It is important for the chicken wire to fully reach the columns and beams so that the plaster can fully reach and bind with the columns and beams (plaster does not adhere well to bottles without chicken wire).
Sawdust Plaster
Due to the availability of sawdust as a waste product from a local coffin manufacturer we came up with a formula for sawdust plaster. The interior has 3 layers of sawdust plaster. The first 2 are of the ratio described below, and the final finish layer has additional cement added to the mix. The exterior has 2 layers of sawdust plaster, both of the ratio described below. A third finish layer is then applied that does not use any sawdust. This finishing layer is a traditional cement plaster to which we added iron oxide, a natural pigment, to dye the walls yellow thus eliminating the need for paint. The edges between the columns and beams and the walls on both the exterior and interior are cut in using a traditional cement plaster due to the difficulty in getting the sawdust plaster to bind with the dry concrete of the columns and beams.
Add 4 parts dry sawdust to the mix, stirring as you go to ensure even consistency, and let soak for an hour. The sawdust should be fine, but not granular, and it should be almost fully submerged in water for the soak. If this is not the case, add more water and adjust the ratio for the next batch. All of the sawdust needs to soak with the lime, however too much water at this stage will require adding dry sawdust later, which weakens the consistency and integrity of the mix.
Mix wet sawdust mixture with 3 parts sifted sand. It is best to mix on a tarp rather than on the ground in order to keep the ratio very consistent. The water from the sawdust mixture should be enough for the entire plaster mixture, but even if the mix seems dry, refrain from adding more water until cement is fully mixed.
Apply the first layer using a trowel or by hand with gloves on. Throw the plaster at the ecoladrillo so that it fills in the gaps between the bottles and completely surrounds the chicken wire. This is a thin layer where bottles and chicken wire can still be exposed. The limited use of cement makes application difficult and somewhat of an art form. If the mix is too dry, the plaster will crumbled and bounce off the wall when you try to apply it. It needs to be wet enough to go through the chicken wire without breaking, but not so wet that it slides off the wall.
Apply the second layer by throwing on the plaster and troweling smooth. Small amounts of plaster for each throw will have an easier time sticking to the wall and being troweled smooth. Large throws have a tendency to fall off the wall, especially when trying to smooth it out. Wetting the wall before application is important. This layer should cover any exposed bottles and chicken wire and begin to even out any major depth differences of the wall.
A good size mix uses 22 gallons of sawdust, 2 gallons of lime, 16 and 1/2 gallons of sifted sand, 1 bag of cement, and roughly 20-22 gallons of water. This produces roughly 40 gallons of plaster which covers roughly 1 coat on 10 square meters of wall, depending on the thickness being applied.
Papercrete
Papercrete is a method of building traditional style concrete blocks out of paper. Soaked and shredded paper is mixed with sand and cement and then compressed into a block mould. Papercrete blocks can be stacked and mortared with papercrete mortar and used as a substitute for traditional concrete blocks.
Collect clean paper. It should be free of any food waste or organic material and free of any plastics. The more consistent the paper type the better. Newspaper works best, but most other plastic free paper products (with the exception of cardboard) work as well. As a general note, the easier to shred and re-pulp the paper, the better.
Mix 4 parts dry paper pulp with 4 parts sand and 4 parts cement. Add enough water to the mix to activate the cement and ensure an even consistency. More water can be added later if necessary, however too much water at this stage is difficult to remedy. It is important to mix the paper, sand, and cement all at the same time to prevent clumping of the sand and paper.
Una prensa de bloques compacta la mezcla y reduce el tiempo de secado en casi un 100%. Esto es importante porque en climas húmedos como en Santo Domingo un tiempo de secado más corto es crucial para expandir las posibilidades del papercrete.
Costo/m 2 de Área de Muro
Ecoladrillo Con Aserrín Yeso
Materiales | Precio Unitario (RD$) | Cantidad | Total/m 2 (RD$) |
---|---|---|---|
Alambre, 17'/lb, calibre 10 | $ 36 / libra | 0.5 lbs, 9 lazos | 18.00 |
Alambre de gallinero de 1 cm, 3' de ancho | $ 66 / yarda | 2.5 yardas | 165.00 |
2"X4", Pino | $15/pie tablar | 2,5 pies tablares | 37.50 |
Botellas | $0 | 120 | 0.00 |
Cemento Portland | $267/ pie3 | 0,4 pies 3 | 72.09 |
arena de rio | $750/m 3 | 0,01 metros | 7.50 |
Cal | $90/pie 3 | 0,05 pies 3 | 4.50 |
Serrín | $0 | 9 galones | 0.00 |
Costo Total / m 2 de Área de Muro | $314.59 |
Bloque de hormigón tradicional
Materiales | Precio Unitario (RD$) | Cantidad | Total/m 2 (RD$) |
---|---|---|---|
Bloque de hormigón, tamaño 6 | $20 | 10 | 200.00 |
arena de rio | $750/m 3 | 0,2 m 3 | 15.00 |
Cemento Portland | $267/ pie3 | 0,36 pies 3 | 96.12 |
Barra de refuerzo 3/8" | $7.75/pie | 9 pies | 69.75 |
Costo Total / m 2 de Área de Muro | $380.87 |
El costo de construir ecoladrillo es ligeramente menor por metro cuadrado que el costo de construir con bloque de hormigón tradicional. La contrapartida es que el ecoladrillo requiere mucha más mano de obra y mucho más tiempo para construir. Si la mano de obra no es gratuita o relativamente barata, el ecoladrillo fácilmente podría convertirse en el material más caro. Sin embargo, con la excepción de la mano de obra, el componente más costoso de la construcción de un ecoladrillo es la malla gallinera. La malla gallinera tiene muchas alternativas, la mayoría de las cuales son más costosas; sin embargo, explorar alternativas más económicas sería una forma efectiva de reducir aún más los costos.
Cronología
Para ver una cronología día por día con fotos, visite la páginade la cronología .
Discusión y próximos pasos
Muchos nuevos métodos alternativos de construcción se incorporan en el aula de Las Malvinas II. Además del relleno de ecoladrillo y el yeso de aserrín, hay piso de baldosas rotas recicladas, relleno superior de tableros de partículas reciclados y un uso menor de bloques de papel y cemento. Estamos emocionados ante la perspectiva del continuo interés y disponibilidad del fabricante local de bloques en el proceso y producción de papelcreto. El uso de aserrín como componente principal del yeso también es nuevo y esperamos ver cómo funciona el yeso durante el próximo año. Al igual que con todos los métodos y materiales nuevos, se encontraron numerosos problemas en el desarrollo e implementación de todos estos materiales alternativos. Algunas de esas cuestiones, así como los planes para el desarrollo de materiales futuros, se discutirán en las siguientes secciones.
Discusión
El problema principal con respecto a la construcción del relleno de ecoladrillo es la cantidad y la colocación insuficientes del alambre para atar y tensar la malla gallinera al ras de la pared. Las ataduras de alambre se aseguran a la barra de refuerzo dentro de las columnas y las vigas en incrementos de 20 cm; sin embargo, no se coloca ninguna en las esquinas donde se unen las columnas y las vigas o las columnas y el piso. En algunos lugares, el alambre se clava en la esquina, lo que ofrece una solución menos segura pero aceptable, pero en otros, la única solución era atar la malla gallinera interior al exterior para bloquear las botellas y evitar que la malla gallinera se despegara. Sin embargo, esta solución da como resultado que la malla gallinera esté menos estirada y crea un espacio entre la malla gallinera y la esquina que finalmente debe rellenarse con mortero. Cuanto más enseñado y seguro el alambre de gallinero, menos severas las paredes pueden potencialmente arquearse. Cuanto más nivelada esté la malla gallinera con las columnas y vigas, más fácil será aplicar el yeso y menos probable es que se agriete. La lección aprendida es sobreestimar la cantidad de alambre necesaria y nunca descuidar las esquinas.
The sawdust plaster mix and the papercrete block mix share a similar difficulty. Water retention in sawdust and in paper is significantly high, so when adding soaked sawdust or soaked paper to a mix, the water in those materials alone can make the mix overly wet and unusable. We found that equal parts water and sawdust is enough to fully soak and submerge the sawdust without making the final plaster mix too wet, however there is no way to adequately soak and repulp paper for papercrete without making the paper too wet. Pressing the paper dry before adding to the mix is a passable solution, but it is labor intensive and causes the paper to clump, weakening the integrity of the mix. The best solution is to lay out the wet paper pulp on a tarp to dry in thr sun, however, that can take up to 3 days in a humid tropical climate such as the Dominican Republic.
Next Steps
The next things to happen regarding the schoolroom in Las Malvinas II are:
- Interior walls are to be painted with a lime wash
- Liter of Light may be installed
- Interior will be readied for use
- Observations will be made and recorded regarding the durability of the walls
Updates
- Interior has been readied and classes have started
- Interior has been painted with a lime wash