Showing posts with label Concrete. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Concrete. Show all posts

Monday, December 31, 2012

Inhabitat's Week in Green: biological concrete, flexible solar cells and the top wearable tech of 2012

Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week's most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us -- it's the Week in Green.


New Year's Eve is fast approaching, and workers in New York City are hard at work installing 32,256 LED lights on the Times Square New Year's Eve ball. As we close the book on 2012, Inhabitat has been reflecting on all the top clean energy and green technology stories from the past year. From news that Germany met half the country's energy needs with solar power to an Egyptian teenager who built a new quantum space propulsion system, 2012 was a big year for clean tech. To ring in the New Year we also rounded up the top green transportation and wearable technology posts, and we're inviting all our reader to vote on the stories they liked best!
Now that Christmas is behind us, it'll soon be time to start figuring out how to sustainably dispose of all those holiday decorations. In China, Christmas light recycling plants will process some 20 million pounds of Christmas lights and recycle them into useful products. In other green tech news, Spanish researchers have developed a new type of biological concrete that makes it easier to attach plants to the side of buildings to create living walls. Researchers at Wake Forest University recently developed a new type of light bulb that uses field-induced polymer electroluminescent technology to create a soft white, full spectrum light that could last a decade. And to help keep your heating bill low, we've rounded up the top six gadgets for the home to help you go green this winter.
In green transportation news, China unveiled the world's longest high-speed rail line this week. The 1,428-mile railway connects Beijing with Guangzhou, halving the travel time between the two cities. A bike called the ReCycle became the world's first 100 percent recycled bike to hit the road, and the city of Los Angeles announced that it will soon launch the nation's second-largest bike-sharing program. The $16 million project will bring 4,000 bikes, complete with solar-powered bike stations, to downtown LA. And if you've ever dreamt of driving on pillows, your dream just got one step closer to becoming a reality: Humanix's new iSAVE electric vehicle is completely wrapped in air-filled cushions which are meant to soften the blow between the vehicle and anything it comes into contact with.
In what could prove to be a major breakthrough for solar technology, engineers at Stanford University have successfully fabricated thin, flexible solar cells that are able to be peeled and attached to almost any surface. California recently set a record for winter solar power generation, almost reaching the previous record set this summer of just over 1 gigawatt of solar energy. And in one of the best Christmas gifts ever, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced on Christmas Eve that an additional $250 million will be made available for renewable energy projects across the state.
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Friday, December 21, 2012

Concrete Wine Bunkers Let You Get Drunk Even After the World Ends

This story will display in ...Dec 20, 2012 3:20 PM  

Concrete Wine Bunkers Let You Get Drunk Even After the World EndsWe're just hours from the Apocalypse at this point. It's way too late to take any preventative action, but that doesn't mean we can't be ready for the aftermath. And what are you going to want when you're battered and bruised, wandering around the torrid wasteland that once was Earth? Alcohol. As much as you can get.

Fortunately, Etsy shop Decratelier is offering a set of modular Concrete Wine Bunkers—undoubtedly your best bet in protecting hooch from asteroid, flood, and Horseman alike.

Each block is sold separately, so you can stack and expand to make the fallout wine cellar of your dreams. Added bonus: the industrial design doesn't just look cool; it keeps your wine cool, too, thanks to concrete's wonderful thermal properties. Concrete will even protect against (some) forms of radiation, nuclear holocaust be damned!

Unfortunately, unless you had the foresight to order ahead of time, you're too late; each $25 block is made to order and requires two weeks for construction. But, hey, at least now you'll be ready for the next Armageddon. [Decratelier via Cool Material]


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