The amazing versatility of bamboo is no secret to green revolution visionaries like architects and builders. They learn firsthand how easily bamboo can be shaped and formed into different building components.

Indoors, sustainable bamboo is a great material for beds, sofas, tables and chairs. Textured bamboo panels enhance the walls, ceilings and sides of breakfast bars and cabinets.

You’ll find bamboo beneath your feet, too, as floor mats and sleek bamboo floor panels. Bamboo is in the finer details of kitchens, too—in essentials such as bamboo spoons, spatulas and cutting boards.

Outdoors, you can relax outside in a bamboo lounge chair or enjoy the beauty and privacy of a backyard protected by a bamboo panel fence.

Worldwide interest in bamboo for residential construction is rising rapidly as climate change evolves from theory to scientific fact. Eco-friendly bamboo is one of the fastest-growing wild grasses on earth.

 

It reaches heights of full maturity in as little as three years and regenerates quickly after harvesting. Some bamboo species can grow over 35 inches in a single day. Bamboo thrives on otherwise unproductive land like deep ravines and mountainsides.

When choosing floor coverings for a new, green home, it’s good to know that bamboo floors are completely sourced from eco-friendly sustainable plants. Bamboo forests are very friendly to the environment.

Some bamboo species have the same strength ratio as steel and almost twice the compression ratio of concrete—not bad for a hollow, light-weight grass. Building with bamboo is hardly a new concept.

Many countries have been doing it for hundreds of years. Inspired by heightened interest in eco-friendly bamboo, trail-blazing teams of architects and builders are creating amazing bamboo structures for schools, hotels, homes and even bridges.

Due to its light weight and elasticity, bamboo is a popular building material in areas of the world where earthquakes, hurricanes and typhoons strike more frequently. Bamboo absorbs the shocks of seismic activity and high winds far better than rigid concrete and steel structures.

 

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Credit: Pinterest

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