Hempcrete House - World’s First Hemp & Paper-Walled Home
 
 
 
Hidden  between the walls of this one-of-a-kind residence are piles of hemp,  long touted as a sustainable material with many eco-friendly uses but  rarely thought of as a building material. For this home, however,  something special was required: the designer created it for his  daughter, who has extreme chemical sensitivities that limited what could  be used in its construction. Necessity, as they say, is the mother (or  father) or invention.
Mixed  with other materials, the resulting ‘Hempcrete’ used by Push Design may  be a bit misleading by name – it is not a structural substance, but  rather an insulator and air purifier. Placed inside wall voids, it  absorbs CO2, filters particulates and (like concrete) creates a barrier  of thermal mass that helps regulate interior temperatures.
The  outside of the walls feature a stealthy surprise as well: instead of  typical wallboard or sheet rock, a composite cardboard-like, paper-based  and fully-structural covering is used that is both non-toxic and fully  recycled (and recyclable in the future, for that matter).
If you have ever seen a house being  demolished (or participated in a renovation project) you know from  experience: having a safe alternative when knocking down walls would be  much nicer than breathing drywall dust, and you would feel better if you  could recycle the materials as well. Best of all, though, putting this  home up in the first place was not just green for the long term – it was  cheap and easy right in the here and now.




 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
