SEH Cost Savings
Hint: This page describes how we can reduce the cost of materials and build cost of a 1375 sf Seed Eco-Home from $60k to $20k in materials by using open source machines and materials production machines
Narrative
The way to reduce housing cost is by:
- Optimized Design - open source blueprints, design optimization with integrated design, and open production engineering. All are required for an efficient build that exceeds industry standards.
- Open-source compliance documentation - producing documentation and engineering reference drawings to reduce permit, plan check, and engineering costs from thousands to near zero marginal cost
- Efficient Build - 24 person, 5 day modular swarm build that exponentiates learning
- Open Source Machines - for construction and materials production.
- Open Source Fuels - plastic pyrolysis for gas and diesel obtained from waste stream plastic. Followed by the full blown Solar Hydrogen Economy
If the current cost is $60k for materials for a 1375 sf 3 bed 2 bath home with 6kW photovoltaics, we can slash this cost to $20k with open source machines and materials. Total Savings in an Open Sector Enterprise are $39640.
- Seed Eco-Home Savings with Open Source Construction Machines - $4340
- Seed Eco-Home Materials Cost Reduction - $35300
It would be impossible for any enterprise to execute on the above without open source hardware, including:
- Automated grading - cost reduction of $2k in labor. Once built, lifetime design operating costs must be considered:
This is not to mention operating costs:
- Thermal Battery - 70% electrical consumption reduction out of the box because water heating, cooling, and hot water are 70% of all electric use. Integration with Direct Geothermal makes sense.
- Open Source Inverter - $2k savings for every 5 years lifetime of an inverter.
- Open Source Heat Pump - $2k every 5 years for 5 year lifetime of a heat pump
Higher tech endeavors include:
- Photovoltaics Manufacturing - currently cost is 20 cents per watt, as low as 7 cents from china
Priorities
The general narrative is to displace as much by 3D printing as possible, up to nonstructural infill, deck lumber, pervious pavement block, geogrid, and geotextile. Start on complex components like windows and doors with composites. For windows, off-the-shelf glass can be used with gas infill using TPU seals. Insulation experiments should commence with multiwall polycarbonate glazing, or honeycomb cells, or fine spaghetti.
Lumber is low hanging fruit using an open source lumber mill, adding CNC and using trusses like in the Large Workshop Structure
Concrete eperiments with a lime kiln, in 6kW modules stackable to 100 kW.
Roofless Roof can be implemented readily to eliminate or minimize RPE usage.
For cost reduction based on the above, including strategic elements of public appeal and versatile applications, the priority list is:
- Open source 3D printing in plastics, and composites - today
- What is the shredder we should build?
- What is the filament maker we should build?
- Should we invest in pellet-based printing?
- Open source CNC lumber mill - $10k in lumber saved
- Lime Kiln and supporting infrastructure - $3k in concrete + rock.