Papercrete Recipe

The Truth about Papercrete by Kelly Hart Around 1997, when Rosana and I first came to Crestone, Colorado, there was a buzz going around town about an amazing new building material that its inventor, Mike McCain, called 'fibrous cement,' but that has become more widely known as 'papercrete.' Mike, with his tremendous enthusiasm, was generating interest in the wonders of his new discovery: that if you mix a bit of Portland cement with re-pulped paper you end up with a malleable building material that can be used for almost any building project. It was described as cheap, easy to make, environmentally sound, insulating, insect and fire resistant, holds nails and screws without cracking, can be cut with ordinary saws, is lightweight.

Since papercrete and ferrocement are both outside of the standard UL listed building materials we needed to employ a structural engineer to review our sketchup drawings. The engineer did not cost much ($100) and had some good suggestions which we incorporated into our design. How To Make Papercrete — Papercrete is the ultimate building material for preppers, homesteaders, and off grid living enthusiasts. It is easy and cheap to make. It also could solve your paper and cardboard recycling problems.

In other words a dream material for building! Epson Lq 500 Windows Xp. Mike shared his enthusiasm through conducting workshops on how to make this stuff and demonstrating its merits at the Crestone Energy Fair. Epson Dlq 3000 Driver Windows 7 64 Bit more. Like many locals, I became intrigued with the potential of papercrete. At the time I was collecting footage for a video program I was working on called 'A Sampler of Alternative Homes: Approaching Sustainable Architecture,' and I decided to include papercrete in this. While videotaping other segments for this program in New Mexico, I discovered that Mike was not the first to have discovered papercrete! Hp 990c Driver Windows 10 more. Eric Patterson of Silver City, New Mexico, had actually patented the process of making the exact same material, which he called 'padobe,' (as in 'paper adobe.'