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Brickless And Nearly Cement-Free Constructions: How Houses Made From Recycled Plastic, Ashes, And Industrial Waste Are Becoming Cheaper And More Durable In Various Countries

Written by Valdemar Medeiros
Published on 09/02/2026 at 05:35
Updated on 09/02/2026 at 05:37
Construções sem tijolo tradicional e quase sem cimento: como blocos feitos com plástico reciclado, cinzas e resíduos industriais estão virando casas populares mais baratas e resistentes em vários países
Construções sem tijolo tradicional e quase sem cimento: como blocos feitos com plástico reciclado, cinzas e resíduos industriais estão virando casas populares mais baratas e resistentes em vários países
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Blocks Made From Recycled Plastic and Industrial Waste Are Already Being Used to Build Cheaper, Faster, and More Sustainable Houses in Brazil and Worldwide.

In Carapicuíba (SP), Brazil, in projects that began in 2019, houses started to be built with blocks made of recycled plastic, replacing conventional ceramic bricks and drastically reducing the use of Portland cement. The initiative involved the NGO TETO Brasil, the company Fuplastic and institutional partners, with technical support and coverage by media outlets such as Revista Casa Abril. At the same time, similar experiences were advancing in countries such as Colombia, South Africa, the United States, and Mexico, supported by universities, engineering startups, and international housing and sustainability organizations.

These projects are not conceptual: they involve real houses, inhabited, built from plastic waste, industrial ash, slag, and materials previously discarded, now transformed into modular structural blocks.

The Structural Problem of Traditional Brick and Portland Cement

The construction industry accounts for about 37% of global CO₂ emissions, according to UN data. One of the main contributors is Portland cement, whose manufacturing process involves the calcination of limestone at high temperatures, releasing large volumes of carbon dioxide.

Furthermore, traditional ceramic bricks:

  • Require firing in high-temperature kilns
  • Consume large amounts of energy
  • Depend on continuous clay extraction
  • Cause significant losses during transportation and laying

In countries with high housing deficits, these costs make formal housing expensive, slow, and environmentally burdensome.

How Blocks Made From Recycled Plastic and Industrial Waste Work

The alternative blocks used in these projects are not improvised. They follow well-defined materials engineering principles.

YouTube Video

Recycled Plastic Blocks

Companies such as Fuplastic (Brazil) and Conceptos Plásticos (Colombia) utilize:

  • Post-consumer plastics (PET, HDPE, PP)
  • Crushing, washing, and controlled melting
  • Molding into modular blocks with interlocking

These blocks:

  • Do not require traditional mortar
  • Function through an interlocking system
  • Reduce construction time by up to 60%
  • Are resistant to moisture, fungi, and insects

Use of Ashes, Slag, and Mineral Waste in Construction

In addition to plastic, several projects incorporate industrial waste:

YouTube Video
  • Fly ash from thermoelectric plants
  • Blast furnace slag from steel production
  • Processed mining waste

These materials act as bonding agents or aggregates, replacing part of the cement. Research published in databases such as ScienceDirect shows that hybrid blocks exhibit:

  • Mechanical resistance compatible with affordable housing
  • Better thermal insulation
  • Lower water absorption

Institutions such as MIT D-Lab, universities in India and Latin America, and UN-Habitat are monitoring these developments.

Documented Real Cases in Brazil

Carapicuíba (SP)

Houses built with recycled plastic blocks have been constructed for low-income families, with:

  • Significant reduction of plastic waste sent to landfills
  • Construction completed in weeks, not months
  • Lower costs than traditional masonry

Source: Revista Casa Abril, TETO Brasil.

Academic Research

Brazilian federal universities have been testing:

  • Bricks made with plastic and sand waste
  • Blocks with industrial ashes
  • Low-impact construction components

These studies are published in technical journals and presented at civil engineering and sustainable architecture conferences.

International Experiences That Reinforce the Trend

Colombia

 Conceptos Plásticos has built houses, schools, and community centers with blocks made from recycled plastic, including for displaced populations.

United States

The company ByFusion Global developed blocks produced from non-recyclable mixed plastic, converting 1 ton of waste into 1 ton of building material, without chemical additives.

South Africa and India

Pilot projects use plastic and industrial waste to reduce housing costs in dense urban areas.

Why These Constructions Are Gaining Ground Now

Three factors explain the acceleration of this trend:

  • Environmental Crisis: Reducing emissions and waste has become a global priority
  • Housing Deficit: Quick and affordable solutions are urgent
  • Technical Advancement: Alternative materials have reached structural maturity

What was once seen as “experimental” is now entering real housing programs, with technical standards being adapted.

Limits, Challenges, and Technical Precautions

Despite the advantages, experts warn:

  • Each material needs local certification
  • Structural performance varies according to climate
  • Zoning regulations remain conservative in many countries

Therefore, the most successful projects are those that combine:

  • Academic research
  • Professional engineering
  • Institutional support

The use of blocks made from recycled plastic and industrial waste does not completely eliminate cement nor replace all traditional techniques. But it opens a new path: building houses that are faster, cheaper, and more sustainable, using what was once merely treated as trash.

In a scenario of accelerated urban growth and environmental pressure, these solutions cease to be a curiosity and begin to integrate the central debate about the future of housing.

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Magali antunes
Magali antunes
12/02/2026 00:16

Casas nas favelas periferias bairros cidades para pessoas pobres carentes moradores de ruas idosos deficientes jovems

Raquel Bezerra Moreira
Raquel Bezerra Moreira
11/02/2026 22:19

Bom a ideia é boa mas um pouco preocupante com a camada de ozônio acidente de incêndio e a fumaça do fogo de uma casa de tijolo de plástico a fumaça é tóxico é perigoso a contaminação do solo e da água e a inalação da fumaça podem tirar vida tanto humana como ****.

Kleber
Kleber
Em resposta a  Raquel Bezerra Moreira
15/02/2026 16:30

A resina utilizada na compactação desses matériais são anti chamas, o que garante quase zero absorção de umidade, resistência termica e alta eficiência em pressão peso na obra e leveza no manuseio e instalação.

Simone
Simone
11/02/2026 08:03

Muito bom, como faço para saber preço e se entrega em outro Estado?

Valdemar Medeiros

Formado em Jornalismo e Marketing, é autor de mais de 20 mil artigos que já alcançaram milhões de leitores no Brasil e no exterior. Já escreveu para marcas e veículos como 99, Natura, O Boticário, CPG – Click Petróleo e Gás, Agência Raccon e outros. Especialista em Indústria Automotiva, Tecnologia, Carreiras (empregabilidade e cursos), Economia e outros temas. Contato e sugestões de pauta: valdemarmedeiros4@gmail.com. Não aceitamos currículos!

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