Building with excavated material

Earth is an ideal building material: it’s low-cost, saves resources and regulates indoor climates. What's more, earth is readily available in the places where people build. Yet the construction potential of earth remains undervalued.

Enlarged view: Excavated earth
Earth as a building material: more versatile than you might think. (Image: Chair for Sustainable Construction / ETH Zurich)

When modern humans build a structure, it usually works like this: they dig a pit, transport the excavated material away in a lorry and deliver tonnes of sand, gravel and cement in its place. This is mixed with water to create concrete, which is used to build the foundations and the house. The latter is then fitted out primarily with complex building technologies to compensate for any losses in comfort.

Earthy architecture

We want to show that there’s another way to do this. Specifically, by making better use of the excavated material – the inorganic part of the soil – on which we build our houses. Excavated material can help us tackle a number of the problems the construction world is currently facing, from resource scarcity and climate change through to indoor climate control and its often-unsatisfactory building systems.

With this in mind, the Chair of Sustainable Construction is collaborating with IG Lehm, the association for earth construction in Switzerland, to organise the exhibition THINK Earth! in the main hall at ETH Zurich (see box). The exhibition introduces earth as a building material, explains the relevant construction techniques and offers examples of contemporary earthen architecture.

An alternative building material

Enlarged view: Earth brick
A stabilized compressed earth brick. Screenshot taken from the THINK Earth! Film “Earth and Resources”. (Image: Chair for Sustainable Construction / ETH Zürich).

Earth has been a reliable building material since human beings first left their caves. Indeed, earthen construction may well be the oldest building technique in the world. Unfortunately, it is no longer the most important, particularly in modern cities. Today, we build primarily with wood, brick, steel and concrete, but rarely with mud – too rarely, in our opinion. As a construction material, earth is similar to concrete, except that the gravel and other components are bound together by clay, rather than cement.

But there are some important differences. Examine the issue of resources, for example, and a paradoxical situation emerges: almost everywhere in the world, the construction industry is busy trying to secure enough good sand and cheap gravel for the production of concrete – an energy-intensive process. Sand, a seemingly endless raw material, is being dug away from rivers, lakes and coasts, and is slowly but surely running out (see the following blog entry in German).

While this is happening, we are removing a perfectly suitable building substrate from our cities and transporting it away at great expense to landfills and gravel pits. If we made greater use of the excavated material in construction instead, we would not only short-circuit this supply chain, but also spare our sand and gravel resources and save energy and CO2.

A naturally regulated indoor climate

Dry air is an increasingly common problem for residents of new buildings. Problems with humidity and the indoor climate are caused by high-density construction methods and controlled ventilation and heating systems. The most common response to this deficiency is to use as much sophisticated, complex technology as possible.

However, using earth as plaster can regulate air humidity naturally and make for a significantly more comfortable indoor climate. Rather than viewing earth as a full and sufficient replacement for structural building materials such as concrete, we should see it more as an alternative for building services technology.

At the extension of Triemli Hospital in Zurich, for example, a mud plaster works alongside the standard building system to provide a regulated indoor climate. Ricola’s Kr?uterzentrum (herb centre), on the other hand, is quite different: there, the delicate herbs are stored at the correct humidity between massive earth walls, without using any other building systems.

The school pavilion Allenmoos II
The school pavilion Allenmoos II (Boltshauser Architects). Screenshot taken from the THINK Earth! Film “Earth and Health”. (Image: Chair for Sustainable Construction / ETH Zurich)

Rethinking dirt

We are convinced that mud is a traditional building material which is reclaiming its place in the modern world. But there are still hurdles to overcome; old building techniques are no longer compatible with the requirements of today's construction industry (level of comfort requirement, speed of construction, costs).

Researchers around the world are currently working on precisely this issue. Empa, for example, is developing mud plasters with aerogels in order to further improve the humidity-regulating properties of the earth. In France and Switzerland, innovative approaches to reinforce earth are being devised using prestressing. And at ETH Zurich, we are working on a liquid earth that can be poured into formworks in the same way as conventional concrete. This would significantly reduce the working costs of building with earth.

If you are interested in earth architecture, you are invited to visit Think Earth!.

Guillaume Habert wrote this article in collaboration with Sasha Cisar.

Think Earth! – building with earth today

Logo

The exhibition will show the potential of excavated material in construction. It opens at 5.30 p.m. on 30 October 2017 in room HG E 3. The exhibition will display projects which have received the TERRA Award, the prize for contemporary earthen architecture. There will be two discussions tackling the themes of “Earth and Health” (on 1 November, in German) and “Earth and Technology” (on 3 November, in English), both at 5.30 p.m. in the Semper Aula.

You can find more information about the exhibition and view the programme here.

About the authors

Guillaume Habert

Guillaume Habert

Professor of Sustainable Construction,

ETH Zurich

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All posts by Guillaume Habert

Sasha Cisar

Sasha Cisar

Doktorand am Lehrstuhl für Nachhaltiges Bauen,

ETH Zürich

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