Take the bloodline of a freshly butcher creature . desegregate good with preservatives and sand , pour into square molds , and bake for one hour . Allow to cool — then work up your home from the resultant . No , really .
At least , that ’s whatJack Munro , an architect with a passion for material research and experimentation , would care us to do . He ’s been experiment with weird and grand technique to make new building materials , and he ’s stumbled across one which use fresh animal blood as its floor . He explains :
creature blood is one of the most fertile barren material in the world . The blood drained from fauna carcass is generally thrown away or incinerated despite being a potentially useful product .

The cook up process involves ruffle fresh blood with a preservative ( EDTA , forestall bacterial / fungous growth on the material ) and Amandine Aurore Lucie Dupin . This mixture was then localise in a form study and bake for 1 time of day at 70 C. This covering of heat is sufficient to coagulate the rake proteins into a solid insoluble flock which bonds the Baroness Dudevant into a unchanging solid .
The resulting material is crummy , surprisingly strong and waterproof . Because it ’s made of a prolific wastefulness mathematical product — unless you eat a lot ofboudin noir — it seems like a perfect building cloth for poorer nation around the macrocosm .
If you ’re concerned , you’re able to read all about Jack ’s enquiry — from stirring rip in a bucket to compression testing his bricks — over on his website . [ Jack MunroviaFrank Swain ]

ArchitectureBricksDesign
Daily Newsletter
Get the best tech , skill , and culture news in your inbox day by day .
News from the future , delivered to your present .
Please select your desired newssheet and state your electronic mail to upgrade your inbox .

You May Also Like











![]()
