Empresas y finanzas

Glass Houses and Porous Bricks: the House of the Future from Geofusion



    If researchers and engineers from the UK have their way, the
    construction world will abandon 5,000 years of clay brick manufacture
    - and we´ll all be living in glass houses.

    Engineers from technology company Geofusion have turned research
    work from Staffordshire University into the first major revolution in
    brick manufacture since early potters used clay working skills to
    improve mud and straw bricks.

    Geofusion - backed by a multi-million pound investment from Credit
    Suisse - will have a UK factory within a year, producing bricks made
    of recycled glass, including glass waste which is currently expensive
    or impossible to recycle, and which ends up in landfill sites
    (coloured glass, TV and computer screens in particular).

    A further four factories - based in the UK and Europe - are
    planned in the first phase of growth and the company plans to license
    further manufacturing outside the UK. The technology is being targeted
    at developers requiring high levels of renewable materials in their
    buildings.

    The bricks look just like a conventional brick but involve no
    ´extractive´ work - so the days of huge unsightly open quarries which
    currently provide the millions of tonnes of clay consumed by the
    construction industry annually could be limited.

    But the technology - which can also be used to make paving stones
    and ´slips´ (tiles) - has some hidden secrets: if necessary, the
    pavers can be made ´porous´. Water engineers say floods and water
    shortages can be caused by urban and commercial developments which
    disrupt the flow of rainwater back to the land. Construction engineers
    have struggled for years with a variety of solutions - but all have
    serious drawbacks. Geofusion´s porous bricks will allow them to
    capture the rainwater falling on car-parks and buildings (including
    the walls), and reuse it.

    The company says the glass-based pavers can be recycled several
    times, meaning they could be used to create the world´s first totally
    recyclable building. They can be made with greater precision than
    traditional baked bricks, and quantities and costs can be controlled
    more easily. They can be colour matched precisely, and the
    manufacturing process uses considerably less energy.

    Geofusion´s website is at www.geo-fusion.co.uk.

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