Let me start off by saying that I'm only involved in this project in the design and tech side, no real labor yet. I hope that doesn't ruin this instructable for you, if I missed anything you can check our project website for extra details.
Visit any new construction, remodel, large painting project or stucco job and you will find 5 gallon buckets. Some of these may be reused for a short time but the majority will quickly find themselves in the local landfill. Each 5 gallon bucket uses approximately 1 cubic foot of landfill (a little less when compressed, but not much) so removing the quantity required to build this wall will reduce the landfill by many thousand cubic feet. This Bucket Wall is already attracting a lot of passer-by attention and it is expected that some new walls and other projects will be inspired by this technology, removing even more buckets from future landfills.
The Bucket Wall has a lot in common with building methods that incorporate straw bales, cord wood, bottles, and earth, in that it reuses existing products that might otherwise become landfill.
The ultimate hope for this project is that the methods perfected here will be structurally sound enough to use in ecologically friendly house construction and landscaping.
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If you have thousands of buckets already and want to work fast forget the above and start calculating:
The basic structural unit that we used was a stack of 25-30 5 gallon buckets. The widest part of the bucket is ~1 foot in diameter and a stack buried 3-4 feet in the ground is around 7 feet high. Each stack is wrapped in wire and stuccoed but this doesn't add much to the dimensions.
So for each foot of wall you need
~30 buckets
1 foot x 14 feet of wire mesh (old chain link, chicken wire, rebar, remesh etc.) + enough for overlap
wire for "sewing" above wire onto bucket stacks
a 1 foot x 1foot x 4 foot deep trench
enough cement to stucco it
the lids from your bucket stack to fill in gaps and level top of wall
time.... (again skip this if you're not "normal")
I'm not going to break it down any further, let's just say thousands and thousands of buckets are required, and it might take a while, think of the planet, and if you get sick of it try pricing a chain link fence.
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I do realize that this might reduce some of the rigidity of the wall if pressure was applied to the uppermost section, however if you're just looking to fill volume, you could always reinforce with rebar through the buckets or something to that effect.
http://www.customgardendesigns.com/gr_vines.htm
- The owner of our wall wanted something to blend in with the existing adobe house
- our chemistry friends, and some commenters on this posting have mentioned that HDPE (the plastic in 5 Gal buckets), while having great resistance to alcohols, acids and bases, has poor resistance to UV radiation.
tristan993 wrote:
"u could withhold the stucco if u were going for a post-apocalyptic-survivor look though"
You'd probably have to go with poured concrete footings to put the buckets on. Also, you'd probably want to fill the buckets with some sort of insulation, like you'd do with the spaces between in cord wood masonry construction.
Storeyc wrote:
"I would have been tempted to just erect the bucket stacks and then grow vines over them."
since you are already using rebar, what if you put rebar spikes/posts spaced about bucket radius apart, and impaled the buckets on the rebar spikes/posts and filled them with earth/rubble. alternate the rows like normal brickwork, and if this isn't strong enough, maybe cut notches in the the bucket's rims so that they interlock slightly? this way the full volume of each bucket would contribute to the wall, instead of just the top ~3 inches or so, and would allow you to build a much longer stretch of wall with the same amount of buckets.
just to elaborate, if as you said the average bucket is ~12" diameter, stick a rebar spike in the ground every ~7" for the first course of buckets, impale a bucket on every even # spike, and fill them with earth/rubble. for the next course, impale a bucket on every odd # spike, fill, repeat.
*shrugs* just an idea to get your buckets to stretch a bit further...