Polished concrete floor in ecological, sustainable house by www.milessampson.com


Polished concrete floor made of eco cement and recycled glass in ecological low energy house designed by the architect Miles Sampson. The house and other projects can be viewed at www.milessampson.com This house was featured on TV and this and other clips are taken from the programs. The house is located in Co. Clare in the west of Ireland. It has grass roofs, triple glazing, cedar timber cladding. It has an open plan orientated to the south to take advantage of passive solar gains. This house is not a fully passive house or passiv haus but due to its detailed design will require little energy to heat. The house also features a wood pellet boiler, vacuum tube solar panels and a heat recovery ventilation system. It uses low embodied energy materials like cellulose recycled newspaper insulation, eco concrete, ecocem, timber frame, lime on wood fibre render system. This building features many more green or sustainable aspects which can be seen at www.milessampson.com

Duration : 0:1:18


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$324,900 Single Family Home, Sandwich, NH

Technorati Tags: architect, architecture, Building, cement, concrete, eco, floor, glass, green, Ireland, passive, Polished, recycled, solar, sustainable

This entry was posted in Build Wood Fired Boiler and tagged architect, architecture, Building, cement, concrete, eco, floor, glass, green, Ireland, passive, Polished, recycled, solar, sustainable. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Polished concrete floor in ecological, sustainable house by www.milessampson.com

  1. ecologicalarchitect says:

    Yes, it was the …
    Yes, it was the same grinder used for ordinary polished concrete. The expensive part is the labour. Polishing concrete is very time consuming. If you can get the labour cheap or do it your self then it is not so expensive and you don’t have to put down any other floor finishes.

  2. k8moore says:

    Floor looks very …
    Floor looks very good. Is the polisher/grinder the same type used for ordinary polished concrete? Is it an expensive process/product?

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