HungrigerHugo
2024-02-21 19:45:29
- #1
Isn't Danwood one of the cheapest on the market?No idea! What are you building from Danwood? I like their houses and would have liked to build with them – but in the end, they were too expensive for us.
Isn't Danwood one of the cheapest on the market?No idea! What are you building from Danwood? I like their houses and would have liked to build with them – but in the end, they were too expensive for us.
I am quite surprised that no one has addressed the issue of microplastics in drinking water yet. Ultimately, these polymer fibers are nothing else. At the latest when such concrete structures are demolished, a lot of them are released and enter the ecosystem – whether anyone is still alive or not doesn't matter to the environment at first. It’s quite alarming that this is supposed to contribute to improving the ecological balance. It also took a long time with asbestos before things changed. Of course, steel is more energy-intensive but absolutely unproblematic to recycle. When I think of our old house and the slab we demolished: the concrete was crushed in a crusher and processed into fill material and I took the iron to the scrap dealer. Nothing was left over.
Just call the waste disposal company and tell them you have a polymer fiber reinforced slab to dispose of. They’ll roll out the red carpet for you. We had a similar issue with bricks filled with stone wool – hazardous waste according to the disposal company because of different waste groups and difficult to separate. That’s why we ultimately decided on perlite as filling because it can be disposed of 1:1 with the brick and under the same waste group without further separation etc.
I dare to doubt that. I don't have concrete numbers and data, but if I remember our house-building discovery phase correctly, DanWood was one of the best providers in terms of price/performance (if you want to build completely turnkey). What we were told directly by DanWood are the additional costs that come our way. After that, one was already out of the 'cheap' range. DanWood just provides the house and nothing else. Everything else – including architect services, etc. – costs extra. What convinced us was that we heard many positive reviews about DanWood from different sources.Isn't Danwood one of the cheapest on the market?
Just like above. We were able to attend a scheduled appointment, and I had the Brave individually downsized and calculated. Including additional services, we were out in terms of price.Doesn't Danwood belong to the cheapest on the market?
Which one: 176 or 180?We were able to attend a setup appointment, and I had the Brave individually reduced and calculated.
I would ban the parroting of pub talk. Microplastics are particles, not fibers. You can't reinforce anything with that.Even though I am anything but an eco- or climate terrorist, I see it similarly. All this polymer, microplastic junk should be much more restricted and possibly banned.
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