Building Materials

Henry Ford designed and built a car from compression-molded hemp and other natural fibers. He designed it to run on hemp biomass fuel.



Hemp can be used to make cars. There are companies in the U.S. and Europe who make door panels and dashboards by compressing hemp fibers and adding resin or plastic. Ford, Mercedes Benz and others have replaced more expensive and dangerous fiberglass with hemp. These cars are on the roads today!

You can build a house with hemp. Today it is being used to produce caulking, cement, fiberboard, flooring, insulation, paneling, particleboard, plaster, plywood, reinforced concrete and roofing. The hardened material is resistant to rotting, rodents, insects and fire. It is many times lighter than cement and provides both thermal and sound insulation. Concrete pipes reinforced with hemp fiber cost less than one third the price of conventional polypropylene (a material similar to plastic) reinforced concrete pipes and have greater flexibility and resistance to cracking. Fiberboard made from hemp is twice as strong and three times more elastic than fiberboard made from wood. Because of its superior strength and flexibility, it is resistant to cracking and breaking and therefore excellent for areas susceptible to hurricanes, tornadoes and earthquakes.

Henry Ford was fond of saying, "Why use up the forests which were centuries in the making and the mines which required ages to lay down if we can get the equivalent of forests and mineral products from the annual growth of the fields?" George Washington Carver had a response: "I believe that the great Creator has put ores and oil on this earth to give us a breathing spell. As we exhaust them, we must be prepared to fall back on our farms, which is God’s true storehouse and can never be exhausted. We can learn to synthesize material for every human need from things that grow." That "breathing spell" ended 60 years ago when Henry Ford built his car. Since then, we have cut down half of the world’s forests, a primary source of clean air. Only 3 percent of the U.S. original forests still remain. Much of Australia's old-growth forests are being cut down for wood chips. If we don’t start using hemp to help build our societies, what will we use?

READ BOOKS ABOUT HEMP HERE

For further information on Hemp Plastics visit the first 100% hemp store in the world at www.zelfoshop.com and www.hempplastic.com

Info

sponsored by:

  www.hempmusic.com &

www.alivefoods.com

advertise here


Find what you need elsewhere on the web using:

Google
Thanks for supporting HEMP. We work to supply you with information about the hemp (non drug cannabis seed variety) industry in general, hemp foods, hemp food recipes, hemp nutrition and general facts. Hemp plastics, hemp stone, hemp clothing, hemp fibre, hemp books, hemp frisbees, high fly, hemp art, hemp music, hemp pictures, hemp pictures, hemp animations and more. We work to inform you about the differences between marijuana, cannabis, hemp, thc content, nutritional qualities and more. Updates regarding DEA, FDA, ANZFA and other government hemp legislation can also be found via our links pages.