Recycled Homes Made Loofahs and Corn Husks

March 24, 2009 · Written by Adam

Keeping your finger on the pulse of developments within the green world gets harder and harder with more and more sites and information out there. One useful little email I get in my box every week is from Springwise. Generally it has nothing to do with being green, but with innovation and trends. It does however, occasionally marry the two subjects and report on green innovation.

Loofahs

That’s how I found out about houses made from loofahs and corn husks. This is being developed in Paraguay where there is a desperate need for housing. A ’social activist’ called Elsa Zaldivar has found a way to combine the loofah (yep, the same thing you find in the bath), corn and palm husks, and recycled plastics into lightweight panels that can be used to make houses and even furniture.

The panels can be made into varying degrees of thickness and colours and if broken can be melted down and made into new ones. Handy.

Thanks to money from the Rolex Awards for Enterprise, tests are already underway and you can find out more about it here.

Related Posts with Thumbnails
Enjoyed this post? Click on the Yahoo Buzz! button below to Buzz it up!

Comments

One Response to “Recycled Homes Made Loofahs and Corn Husks”

  1. GoforGreenGal on March 25th, 2009 8:12 pm

    This is amazing! I am all for making homes from renewable resources, and I hope that this idea catches on with the rest of the country!

Got something to say?