Pages

Monday 6 August 2012

10 AMAZING RECYCLED HOUSES


New Picture 73aNew Picture 73b

10 Amazing Recycled Houses
By Emily Temple,
Flavor Wire, 5 August 2012.

Our mothers always told us to recycle, but some people go way beyond the blue bin. That’s right: you can live in a house that is completely built of recycled and reclaimed materials. Environmentalists, artists, and even average Joes with some time on their hands have been known to build homes out of junk, discarded building materials, or even bottles and cans. Sure, sometimes they end up looking like crazed art projects, but sometimes they end up looking pretty darn nice. Click through to check out our gallery of recycled homes, and let us know if you’d ever want to live in one of these in the comments! [Click the image source links for more information.]

1. The Scrap House

New Picture 74

The Scrap House, built for World Environment Day 2005 by a group of San Francisco architects, artists, contractors, city officials, and engineers using only scrap and salvaged materials. Photo by Cesar Rubio Photography via Scrap House.

2. Dan Phillips’ Houses

New Picture 75

Dan Phillips builds gorgeous low-income houses almost completely out of salvaged materials, from picture frames to disused wood to license plates. “You can’t defy the laws of physics or building codes,” he told the New York Times, “but beyond that, the possibilities are endless.” Photo by Michael Stravato for The New York Times.

3. Beer Can House

New Picture 76

The Beer Can House, built by John Milkovisch, a retired upholsterer for the Southern Pacific Railroad in 1968. Smells like beer and is open to visitors. Photo by Peter Mier via Flickr.

4. Recycled Bottle Houses

New Picture 77

One of three bottle houses built by Édouard T. Arsenault in Prince Edward Island, Canada out of 25,000 recycled bottles. Photo by Keith Watson via Flickr.

5. The “Junk Castle”

New Picture 78

The “Junk Castle” in Washington State [USA] was built completely out of salvaged materials, costing its owner, high school teacher and artist Victor Moore who built the place for his 1970 MFA thesis assemblage sculpture, only $500. Photos by David Patterson via Inhabitat.

6. La Casa de Botellas (The Ecological Bottle House)

New Picture 79

Constructed from thousands of PET plastic bottles, Casa Ecologica de Botellas Plasticas (or La Casa de Botellas) is “a tool for promoting ecological and social responsibility” that you can also live in. Created by the Alfredo Santa Cruz family in Puerto Iguazu, Argentina, there’s even a matching bottle playhouse in the backyard. Photos via Shelterpop.

7. House Made From Grain Silos

New Picture 80

This house in Woodland, Utah was built from two repurposed grain silos. The inside is surprisingly modern and gorgeous. Photo courtesy Gigaplex Architects.

8. Jardin du Coquillage

New Picture 81

When Bodan Litnianski moved from the Ukraine to France in 1930, he moved into a ruined house and began to restore it with very unconventional materials - shells, glass, toys, whatever he could find. When the house was covered, he kept going, building a wild jardin du coquillage on his small plot of land. Photo via Outsider Environments.

9. Villa Welpeloo

New Picture 82

See how beautiful recycling can be? Villa Welpeloo in Enschede, the Netherlands was created by architects Jan Jongert and Jeroen Bergsma of 2012Architects, who scoured the area for scrap and discarded materials before starting work on the house - the steel framework came from abandoned machinery from a local textile mill, the facade built from the wood from cable reels. Photo by Mark Seleen via Dwell.

10. The Heidelberg Project

New Picture 83

Okay, so it’s not made of recycled materials, but it’s been given a new life with them (and we just couldn’t help ourselves). House from The Heidelberg Project, image via Rookie.


[Source: Flavor Wire. Edited. Top image added.]



No comments:

Post a Comment

Please adhere to proper blog etiquette when posting your comments. This blog owner will exercise his absolution discretion in allowing or rejecting any comments that are deemed seditious, defamatory, libelous, racist, vulgar, insulting, and other remarks that exhibit similar characteristics. If you insist on using anonymous comments, please write your name or other IDs at the end of your message.