Skip to main content

Construction of 3 bhk in 24 hours.



Paddy Menon is a self-confessed rebel. To the extent that he also named his company REBEL Disruptive Building Technologies and occupies the position of Chief Disruptor.

"I am a disruptor. I am a rebel. I am against authority. I make my own roads and I am going to define how construction should be done," he proclaims.



On Saturday, in another display of his rebellious streak, Menon attempted to set a world record by building a three bedroom, 2400 sq ft house within 24 hours using precast technology in T Agrahara, on the outskirts of Bengaluru.

Menon aimed to make it into the Limca Book of World Records with the house built on fast-forward.





"I can build houses faster and this is the way we should be going towards to move India forward," he says.

The precast technology that Menon advocates involves casting wall panels at a plant. During this stage, electrical conduits and water pipes are also fixed into the panels. Once the basement is ready, these panels, including the roof, are erected using cranes.



Structures made using this technology are said to be of better quality, cheaper and requiring less labour than the regular method of construction. This kind of construction is also time-saving and can cut down on up to 64% of the time taken for similar projects using normal construction methods.

Several countries, especially in Europe, have long been using this method to build their infrastructure.







Paddy, a 50-year-old entrepreneur, calls the method "super-quality housing for people at a super-fast speed".

"Our construction methodology is pretty jurassic. Our labour is also not skilled. I hate mediocrity and I think perfection is required here. And you can achieve perfection with engineering and planning. What I am trying to show here is that a house can be made of solid concrete in a day. It is simple and easy with the right planning," he says.







For the record, Menon had exactly 24 hours to complete the house. He used nearly 1.5 hours of it last week to lay the foundation of the house, and the rest of it was used at a stretch from Saturday to Sunday morning. He had to ensure that the house was put together in a way that it was fully functional, from the structure to electricity to plumbing, at the end of the day.



Unfortunately for Paddy, however, heavy rains stopped the team from beating the record. "I am a bit disappointed. We were able to complete nearly 90% of the house in 24 hours. The rain slowed us down and it was not something that was under my control. I couldn't carry on with something that was structurally compromised," he says.



With the record out of their grasp, the team plans to take their time and complete the house by July 22. That’s still just a week’s time to build a three-bedroom house from scratch.

"There are plenty of horror stories about house buyers and their experiences with builders. I want to show that building is simple and that customers don't have to go through that. And precast is cheaper too. If a regular house comes at a price of Rs 4,000-Rs 5,000/sq ft, a precast one can be around Rs 2,000/sq ft," says Paddy.

More@ https://www.technapping.com

Source: The News Minute.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

He suffered from infancy but it took his parents 10 years to detect dyspraxia

He suffered from infancy but it took his parents 10 years to detect dyspraxia - a brain disorder that often made his limbs shiver making it impossible to eat noodles or go for long walks. And when his teacher asked them to send him to a "special" school after he failed a test in his 6th, 'Taare Zameen Par' had indeed arrived! By then, the boy had found a steady friend in his PC. At 8, he had mastered 'Age of Empires' and at 11, he was a gaming pro and dabbled with coding. At 15, his goal was to build something that would help parents of kids like him to detect their disorders very early. He researched and worked relentlessly for 3 years. In 2015, the 18-year-old launched 'My Child' - a free Android app. It takes just 45 seconds to know if a child is suffering from a brain, nerve, speech or physical disorder. It can correctly trace and track disorders even in babies of 11-24 months. The app's been downloaded 12000 times by users in 140 countries....

Road Trip From Mumbai To London!

A road trip from Mumbai to London will be a dream for many. While you keep making and breaking your travel plans, this couple from Mumbai let go of their inhibitions and set out for the challenging road trip.  Meet Baldawa family from Mumbai. FACEBOOK/BADRI BALDWA On March 23 this year , 73-year-old Badri Baldawa embarked on the road trip with his 64-year-old wife and 10-year-old granddaughter in their BMW X5, across 72 days, crossing 19 countries and covering 22,200 km, before reaching London And age for them, is just a number. Mr. Baldawa, steel exporter and chartered accountant by profession, hails from Karnataka and now lives in Mumbai with his family. Embarking on spontaneous adventure trips seems like a norm with the Baldawas. Baldawa had hiked up to one of the base camps of Mount Everest, has driven from Mumbai to Badrinath, has travelled to Antarctica and has drive across Iceland in 2015 along with his 10-year-old granddaughter Nishi, reports  The Hindu .  T...

If the most important servers of Google are bombed, will it destroy its empire? [A Quora Post]

A big company like Google isn't made up of servers. Google runs because of image. Google has become the worlds biggest search engine because of the image of they have formed. Let's say you bombed Google’s servers (pictured). Google is a 500 billion dollar company. In a matter of days, Google would be up and running using another company's servers. In weeks, Google would have restored their own servers. Secondly, (relating to image), if Google went down for a day or two, people would not automatically switch to another search engine. To billions of people, Google has become the default. Bing, DuckDuckGo, and others barely exist for billions of people worldwide. In the end, losing Google for a short while would be a hard blow but Google's image would save the company once it was up and running again. More@ https://www.technapping.com Source : Quora