This shelter is amazing as well.
Building in a Bag — Just Add Water
Disaster-relief policies often require building structures with short lifespans to avoid permanent migration, even though crises can often take several years or decades to resolve. As a result, temporary settlements are often left standing long after the initial response period, resulting in inadequate long-term housing and substandard living conditions.
The award-winning Concrete Canvas Shelter requires no training to assemble and just water to inflate.
Setup is a snap -- just fill the sack of cement-impregnated fabric with water and unfold it. The structure is then inflated with a chemical pack containing a measured amount of gas. In less than a day, the structure has expanded, hardened and is ready for use -- just cut doors and spaces for ventilation from the newly formed concrete "cloth." Additionally, the shelter can be delivered sterile for emergency medical use.
The building-in-a-bag is designed to provide shelter, as well as infrastructure like buildings for headquarters, relief-worker housing and supply storage.
The durable structure has a low overall mass for good earthquake performance, and the shell's thermal properties can be enhanced by covering it with earth or snow. The British engineers behind the project, Peter Brewin and William Crawford, are field-testing prototypes of the design.
http://www.concretecanvas.co.uk/
http://www.concretecanvas.co.uk/28CCSVideo.html
If you would like to purchase any of our Concrete Canvas Shelter units, please contact Concrete Canvas Ltd. directly, specifying how many units and of which variant you require, at
sales@concretecanvas.co.uk or telephone +44 (0)845 6801908.
Here is a different shelter video on setting it up.
http://www.gvshelters.com/20m_assembly.htm