I won’t say anything cos I don’t mean it
won’t make a promise cos I won’t keep it
believe me now, I’d only lie to you
well I’ve said that thought a thousand times
I believe in something that I can’t find
so believe me now, I’d only lie to you
now won’t you say something
please say something
and believe me now, I’d only lie to you
I spend my time collecting all these scars
and I know I’m, lying by the truth that’s in your charm
I hope down inside, I can’t be what I’m not
well I’ve said that thought a thousand times
I believe in something that I can’t find
so believe me now, I’d only lie to you
now won’t you say something
please say something
and believe me now, I’d only lie to you
now won’t you say something
please say something
and believe me now, I’d only lie to you
Source: underpaidgeniusBottle-brick building, upcycling a surplus of plastic bottles to construct buildings:
Steven Shoppman, Plastic Bottles: 20 Times stronger than Bricks
if you don’t have what you need make do with what you already have. A surplus of empty plastic bottles is something that not only affects Africa, but the entire planet.
In a small village in Nigeria, a solution has been applied to not only provide shelter in a poverty stricken country, but find a use for refuse. Packing sand into plastic bottles is a technique that started nine years ago in India, South and Central America. Named “bottle brick” technology, the compacted sand inside the bottles is almost 20 times stronger than bricks. The best part is that in a region that does not have much money to spend on building materials, the houses are estimated to cost 1/3 of a house made of concrete and bricks.
Adding to the appeal of the simple technology, the houses are ideal for the hot Nigerian climate because the bottle bricks buffer the house from the intense heat. Also, in a place known for violence, the houses are completely bullet proof. Bottles are mostly sourced from hotels, restaurants, homes and foreign embassies, so the 500 million bottles that are discarded each year in Nigeria alone are literally finding new homes instead of landfills or the ocean. The circular houses look cool too with the exposed round bottles producing a unique design.
Could be a great use in the US too.