US20060010827A1 - Formwork element - Google Patents

Formwork element Download PDF

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Publication number
US20060010827A1
US20060010827A1 US10/519,494 US51949405A US2006010827A1 US 20060010827 A1 US20060010827 A1 US 20060010827A1 US 51949405 A US51949405 A US 51949405A US 2006010827 A1 US2006010827 A1 US 2006010827A1
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United States
Prior art keywords
formwork element
bodies
wall
prismatic
formwork
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Abandoned
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US10/519,494
Inventor
Robert Vanhoutte
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Individual
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Individual
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B2/00Walls, e.g. partitions, for buildings; Wall construction with regard to insulation; Connections specially adapted to walls
    • E04B2/02Walls, e.g. partitions, for buildings; Wall construction with regard to insulation; Connections specially adapted to walls built-up from layers of building elements
    • E04B2/14Walls having cavities in, but not between, the elements, i.e. each cavity being enclosed by at least four sides forming part of one single element
    • E04B2/16Walls having cavities in, but not between, the elements, i.e. each cavity being enclosed by at least four sides forming part of one single element using elements having specially-designed means for stabilising the position
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B2/00Walls, e.g. partitions, for buildings; Wall construction with regard to insulation; Connections specially adapted to walls
    • E04B2/02Walls, e.g. partitions, for buildings; Wall construction with regard to insulation; Connections specially adapted to walls built-up from layers of building elements
    • E04B2/14Walls having cavities in, but not between, the elements, i.e. each cavity being enclosed by at least four sides forming part of one single element
    • E04B2/26Walls having cavities in, but not between, the elements, i.e. each cavity being enclosed by at least four sides forming part of one single element the walls being characterised by fillings in all cavities in order to form a wall construction
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B2/00Walls, e.g. partitions, for buildings; Wall construction with regard to insulation; Connections specially adapted to walls
    • E04B2/84Walls made by casting, pouring, or tamping in situ
    • E04B2/86Walls made by casting, pouring, or tamping in situ made in permanent forms
    • E04B2/8623Walls made by casting, pouring, or tamping in situ made in permanent forms with spacers and at least one form leaf being monolithic
    • E04B2/8629Walls made by casting, pouring, or tamping in situ made in permanent forms with spacers and at least one form leaf being monolithic with both form leaves and spacers being monolithic
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04CSTRUCTURAL ELEMENTS; BUILDING MATERIALS
    • E04C1/00Building elements of block or other shape for the construction of parts of buildings
    • E04C1/40Building elements of block or other shape for the construction of parts of buildings built-up from parts of different materials, e.g. composed of layers of different materials or stones with filling material or with insulating inserts
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B2/00Walls, e.g. partitions, for buildings; Wall construction with regard to insulation; Connections specially adapted to walls
    • E04B2/02Walls, e.g. partitions, for buildings; Wall construction with regard to insulation; Connections specially adapted to walls built-up from layers of building elements
    • E04B2002/0202Details of connections
    • E04B2002/0204Non-undercut connections, e.g. tongue and groove connections
    • E04B2002/0215Non-undercut connections, e.g. tongue and groove connections with separate protrusions
    • E04B2002/0217Non-undercut connections, e.g. tongue and groove connections with separate protrusions of prismatic shape

Definitions

  • This invention refers to a formwork element which is especially designed for the construction of both interior and exterior walls, and for both one-storey and multi-storey buildings.
  • Said element allows an easy and fast assembly, which can be cut in order to adequate its dimensions to certain practical requirements.
  • the formwork element is designed for the obtention of concrete walls, appropriately reinforced, wherein the pipes or ducts for various services are embedded, with the special feature that said element gives to the walls a high insulation coefficient, both thermal and acoustic.
  • the formwork element is useful for industrial buildings, houses, condominiums, garages, swimming pools, cold chambers, etc.
  • one solution consists of making said walls with reinforced concrete, pouring the concrete “in situ”, after shaping the appropriate formwork.
  • these formworks consist of metal plates, appropriately rigidified, which are interconnected forming two parallel vertical planes, appropriately connected by means of spacers, in such a way that once the formwork has been duly configured, the required metal frameworks are introduced therein and it is finally concreted.
  • the formwork element proposed by the invention resolves in a fully satisfactory manner the aforementioned problems, since it constitutes a lost element designed to definitively form part of the wall obtained thereby, and, due to its own nature, it incorporates its thermal and acoustic insulation characteristics to said wall. Moreover, it is easily frangible or capable of being cut in order to suit its dimensions to the practical requirements of each case and to create orifices or windows therein in order to access the interior ducts.
  • said formwork element is materialised in a body that is essentially rectangular-prismatic, made of expanded polystyrene foam or other material with similar characteristics. It is a hollow body that is open at its facesand provided with internal rigidifying partitions, with the special feature that said body incorporates a plurality of small projections, also rectangular-prismatic, on the periphery of said faces, with a staggered distribution, which define equally-configured housings between one another, so that the projections or cubes on the upper face are opposite the housings on the lower face, which makes it possible to achieve a high solid tongue-and-groove connection between them upon superimposition of the bodies.
  • These rectangular-prismatic elements or bodies exhibit a length that is significantly greater than the height and width, so that walls may be constructed in rows, in a manner similar to conventional construction blocks or bricks, the bodies in each row remaining longitudinally offset with respect to the rows located immediately above and below, so that, in turn, these bodies maintain a staggered distribution on the wall which ensures a perfect relative stability for all of them, and which, moreover, allows for “keying” between the walls on the corners or “T” connections.
  • FIG. 1 shows, according to a schematic perspective representation, a formwork element made in accordance with the object of this invention.
  • FIG. 2 shows, by means of a representation similar to that of FIG. 1 , another formwork element especially designed to allow implementation of horizontal metal frameworks on the wall that is to be produced.
  • FIG. 3 shows, by means of a representation similar to the preceding figures, another formwork element with openings on one of its ends only, which may be used as a closure element where the horizontal framework ends.
  • FIG. 4 shows, also by means of a perspective view, a partial detail of a wall made with formwork elements according to the invention, in a phase prior to the concreting phase.
  • FIG. 5 shows, finally, a longitudinal section detail of an entirely finished wall.
  • FIG. 6 shows another detail of the same wall, in this case in cross-section.
  • the formwork element proposed by the invention is constituted by a rectangular prismatic body ( 1 ), for instance, with external dimensions similar to those of a classic construction block, but with the special feature that it is entirely made of hollow, expanded polystyrene foam, open at both the upper and lower faces, and preferably provided with rigidifying interior and transverse partitions ( 2 ), whose height is significantly lower than that of the body itself ( 1 ).
  • These elements may be interconnected by tonguing-and-grooving, as shown in FIG. 2 , for which purpose, on the perimeter of the upper and lower faces, and as an extension of the considerably thick perimeter wall, they exhibit a plurality of small rectangular-prismatic projections ( 3 ) in the form of die, which have a staggered distribution and which create housings ( 4 ) between one another, which formally and dimensionally coincide with the housings, but there is an offset between the upper and lower faces, so that, when the bodies ( 1 ) are stacked, the projections or die ( 3 ) of one remain opposite and finally embedded in the other's housings ( 4 ), in order to achieve the desired tongue-and-groove effect, which offers high solidity in the co-planar fixing between blocks.
  • the block may exhibit four side walls of the same height, as shown in FIG. 1 , or else the smaller lateral walls ( 5 ) may be affected by wide indentations ( 6 ), as is the case with block ( 1 ′) shown in FIG. 2 , so that, while in the first case it is only possible to provide vertical metal frameworks, which pass through the modules or elements ( 1 ) interior cavities, in the second case, horizontal frameworks may also be provided, specifically located on the indentations ( 6 ).
  • indentations ( 6 ) define longitudinal grooves on the wall for each row obtained by means of bodies ( 1 ′) of this type, which naturally must be closed at the end, for which this purpose, the existence of bodies ( 1 ′′) such as the one shown in FIG. 3 has been anticipated, with indentations ( 6 ) on only one of the smaller side walls ( 5 ), while the other one acts as a closure element, exhibiting a height that coincides with that of the larger side walls.
  • the larger walls of the bodies ( 1 ) create an integral enclosure which corresponds to the internal and external faces of the wall, forming a continuous chamber, closed at the lower end by the floor ( 7 ), which is undeformable through the smaller side walls ( 5 ) and the interior rigidifying partitions ( 2 ) of the prismatic bodies ( 1 ), ( 1 ′), ( 1 ′′), a chamber which will subsequently be filled with a mass of concrete ( 8 ), which, together with the metal frameworks, grants the wall the appropriate structural rigidity, said mass of concrete ( 8 ), however, remaining completely insulated from both the exterior and the interior of the wall, so that, despite its high degree of conductivity, it does not act as a thermal bridge, the larger side walls of the various bodies or modules ( 1 ), ( 1 ′), ( 1 ′′) defining, respectively, an internal and external barrier to both thermal and a
  • ducts may be provided therein, such as the downpipe ( 9 ) shown in FIG. 4 , electric conduits ( 10 ), etc., with side accesses ( 11 ) and ( 12 ) towards the internal or the external face of the wall, which are easily implemented on the formwork due to its own nature, since the expanded polystyrene foam may be easily cut with a saw or any appropriate cutting tool.
  • the wall will be completed with any exterior ( 13 ) or interior ( 14 ) coating, made of any adequate material, in order to provide it with any finishing, such as, for instance, face bricks, plaster, tiles, boarding, wallpaper, etc.

Abstract

The invention relates to a formwork element which is specially designed for the construction of walls and similar. The formwork element comprises a hollow rectangular primatic block or body (1′) which is open at the lower and upper faces thereof and which is made from expanded polystyrene foam or another similar material. The edges of the aforementioned faces are provided with numerous small rectangular prismatic projections (3) in the form of cubes which define therebetween similarly-configured housings (4), the projections on the upper face being offset in relation to those on the lower face. In this way, when the bodies are stacked such that they are offset lengthways, a tongue-and-groove connection is created therebetween, ensuring optimum stability. Numerous bodies (1′) can be stacked to produce a level chamber which is closed at the inner and outer faces thereof and which can receive a mass of reinforced concrete forming the resistant element of the wall. According to the invention, the vertical reinforcements pass through openings (6) in the smaller lateral walls (5) thereof.

Description

    PURPOSE OF THE INVENTION
  • This invention refers to a formwork element which is especially designed for the construction of both interior and exterior walls, and for both one-storey and multi-storey buildings.
  • Said element allows an easy and fast assembly, which can be cut in order to adequate its dimensions to certain practical requirements.
  • The formwork element is designed for the obtention of concrete walls, appropriately reinforced, wherein the pipes or ducts for various services are embedded, with the special feature that said element gives to the walls a high insulation coefficient, both thermal and acoustic.
  • The formwork element is useful for industrial buildings, houses, condominiums, garages, swimming pools, cold chambers, etc.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • As is well-known, within the wide range of possibilities that present-day technology offers for the construction of walls, one solution consists of making said walls with reinforced concrete, pouring the concrete “in situ”, after shaping the appropriate formwork.
  • In general, these formworks consist of metal plates, appropriately rigidified, which are interconnected forming two parallel vertical planes, appropriately connected by means of spacers, in such a way that once the formwork has been duly configured, the required metal frameworks are introduced therein and it is finally concreted.
  • This solution makes it possible the obtention of walls with a high solidity, which nevertheless exhibit various problems. In this regard:
      • In order for the building or construction in question to be solidly finished, its various walls must be linked together by means of said metal frameworks and the concrete must be poured only once, which requires the use of a large formwork surface, i.e. a large number of reinforced metal plates, which entails considerable investment costs and the handling of large amounts of very heavy material.
      • In most cases the formwork plates, which have a modular structure, are not suited to the required practical measures, so that the formwork must be completed either by means of custom-made plates, with the ensuing cost increase, or else by means of fortuitous lower-cost solutions, such as, for example, custom-cut wood planks, which adversely affect the structural resistance of the entire formwork, as well as the construction's aesthetic finishing.
      • Even though these formworks make it possible to incorporate all types of ducts and pipes, such as, for example, wastewater drainage ducts, sanitary water pipes, electric conduits, etc., significant problems arise in connecting these conduits with the exterior, since the formworks′ high cost does not make it possible to create orifices therein in order to access said conduits.
      • Even though the obtained wall offers high mechanic resistance, it has a very low insulation coefficient, both from the thermal point of view and the acoustic point of view.
    DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
  • The formwork element proposed by the invention resolves in a fully satisfactory manner the aforementioned problems, since it constitutes a lost element designed to definitively form part of the wall obtained thereby, and, due to its own nature, it incorporates its thermal and acoustic insulation characteristics to said wall. Moreover, it is easily frangible or capable of being cut in order to suit its dimensions to the practical requirements of each case and to create orifices or windows therein in order to access the interior ducts.
  • To this end, and more specifically, said formwork element is materialised in a body that is essentially rectangular-prismatic, made of expanded polystyrene foam or other material with similar characteristics. It is a hollow body that is open at its facesand provided with internal rigidifying partitions, with the special feature that said body incorporates a plurality of small projections, also rectangular-prismatic, on the periphery of said faces, with a staggered distribution, which define equally-configured housings between one another, so that the projections or cubes on the upper face are opposite the housings on the lower face, which makes it possible to achieve a high solid tongue-and-groove connection between them upon superimposition of the bodies.
  • These rectangular-prismatic elements or bodies exhibit a length that is significantly greater than the height and width, so that walls may be constructed in rows, in a manner similar to conventional construction blocks or bricks, the bodies in each row remaining longitudinally offset with respect to the rows located immediately above and below, so that, in turn, these bodies maintain a staggered distribution on the wall which ensures a perfect relative stability for all of them, and which, moreover, allows for “keying” between the walls on the corners or “T” connections.
  • In any case, the union of the appropriate number of formwork elements, in a co-planar arrangement, and according to the specific requirements of each case, entails obtaining two parallel formwork surfaces, which are perfectly enclosed and continuous, and between which an interior concrete-receiving housing is created, which may be poured therein by any conventional method and which ensures that the mass of concrete extends in one piece to the entire wall or walls of the concerned building or construction, where it is also possible, moreover, to introduce vertical metal frameworks therein which jointly emerge from the foundations.
  • When horizontal frameworks are also needed, the blocks in certain alignments will be provided with wide indentations on the smaller side walls through which said frameworks will pass.
  • The nature of the material comprising these formwork elements, which, as already mentioned, is expanded polystyrene foam, incorporates its thermal and acoustic insulation characteristics to the enclosure, as well as being easy to cut, using a simple saw or any other appropriate tool, both for the production of finish parts or elements with non-standard dimensions and for the creation of orifices or windows on the larger walls for the passage of, or access to, ducts and pipes, if necessary. To this end, these elements incorporate grooves or marks on the side walls which facilitate the cutting.
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • In order to complement the description being made and to contribute to a better understanding of the characteristics of the invention, according to a preferred example of practical embodiment thereof, we attach, as integral part of said description, a set of drawings which, with an illustrative and non-limiting character, represent the following:
  • FIG. 1.—It shows, according to a schematic perspective representation, a formwork element made in accordance with the object of this invention.
  • FIG. 2.—It shows, by means of a representation similar to that of FIG. 1, another formwork element especially designed to allow implementation of horizontal metal frameworks on the wall that is to be produced.
  • FIG. 3.—It shows, by means of a representation similar to the preceding figures, another formwork element with openings on one of its ends only, which may be used as a closure element where the horizontal framework ends.
  • FIG. 4.—It shows, also by means of a perspective view, a partial detail of a wall made with formwork elements according to the invention, in a phase prior to the concreting phase.
  • FIG. 5.—It shows, finally, a longitudinal section detail of an entirely finished wall.
  • FIG. 6.—It shows another detail of the same wall, in this case in cross-section.
  • PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
  • In view of the above-mentioned figures, one can see how the formwork element proposed by the invention is constituted by a rectangular prismatic body (1), for instance, with external dimensions similar to those of a classic construction block, but with the special feature that it is entirely made of hollow, expanded polystyrene foam, open at both the upper and lower faces, and preferably provided with rigidifying interior and transverse partitions (2), whose height is significantly lower than that of the body itself (1).
  • These elements may be interconnected by tonguing-and-grooving, as shown in FIG. 2, for which purpose, on the perimeter of the upper and lower faces, and as an extension of the considerably thick perimeter wall, they exhibit a plurality of small rectangular-prismatic projections (3) in the form of die, which have a staggered distribution and which create housings (4) between one another, which formally and dimensionally coincide with the housings, but there is an offset between the upper and lower faces, so that, when the bodies (1) are stacked, the projections or die (3) of one remain opposite and finally embedded in the other's housings (4), in order to achieve the desired tongue-and-groove effect, which offers high solidity in the co-planar fixing between blocks.
  • The block may exhibit four side walls of the same height, as shown in FIG. 1, or else the smaller lateral walls (5) may be affected by wide indentations (6), as is the case with block (1′) shown in FIG. 2, so that, while in the first case it is only possible to provide vertical metal frameworks, which pass through the modules or elements (1) interior cavities, in the second case, horizontal frameworks may also be provided, specifically located on the indentations (6).
  • These indentations (6) define longitudinal grooves on the wall for each row obtained by means of bodies (1′) of this type, which naturally must be closed at the end, for which this purpose, the existence of bodies (1″) such as the one shown in FIG. 3 has been anticipated, with indentations (6) on only one of the smaller side walls (5), while the other one acts as a closure element, exhibiting a height that coincides with that of the larger side walls.
  • In any case, after the coupling between bodies or modules (1), (1′), (1″), and as shown in FIGS. 4, 5, and 6, the larger walls of the bodies (1) create an integral enclosure which corresponds to the internal and external faces of the wall, forming a continuous chamber, closed at the lower end by the floor (7), which is undeformable through the smaller side walls (5) and the interior rigidifying partitions (2) of the prismatic bodies (1), (1′), (1″), a chamber which will subsequently be filled with a mass of concrete (8), which, together with the metal frameworks, grants the wall the appropriate structural rigidity, said mass of concrete (8), however, remaining completely insulated from both the exterior and the interior of the wall, so that, despite its high degree of conductivity, it does not act as a thermal bridge, the larger side walls of the various bodies or modules (1), (1′), (1″) defining, respectively, an internal and external barrier to both thermal and acoustic transmission.
  • Prior to the pouring of the concrete in the hollow chamber of the formwork, ducts may be provided therein, such as the downpipe (9) shown in FIG. 4, electric conduits (10), etc., with side accesses (11) and (12) towards the internal or the external face of the wall, which are easily implemented on the formwork due to its own nature, since the expanded polystyrene foam may be easily cut with a saw or any appropriate cutting tool.
  • The wall will be completed with any exterior (13) or interior (14) coating, made of any adequate material, in order to provide it with any finishing, such as, for instance, face bricks, plaster, tiles, boarding, wallpaper, etc.

Claims (6)

1. Formwork element which, being especially designed for the obtention of reinforced concrete walls, is characterised in that it has a rectangular-prismatic (1) body, made of hollow, expanded polystyrene foam or other similar material, open at the upper and lower faces, provided with multiple small projections (3) on the periphery of said faces which have the form of die and a staggered distribution and which define equally formed housings (4) between one another, the projections on the upper face being offset with respect to those of the lower face, in order to achieve a multiple tongue-and-groove coupling upon superimposition of the bodies (1).
2. Formwork element, according to claim 1, characterised in that said prismatic body (1) has internal rigidifying partitions (2), preferably of a height substantially smaller than that of the body itself (1).
3. Formwork element, according to claims 1 and 2, characterised in that the prismatic body (1′) incorporates wide indentations (6) on the edges of its smaller side walls (5), when said body (1′) is designed to become a part of rows on the wall whereon it is necessary to create horizontal metal frameworks.
4. Formwork element, according to claim 3, characterised in that the prismatic bodies (1″) designed to occupy the end positions on said rows which receive the horizontal metal frameworks, exhibit indentations (6) on only one of the smaller side walls, while the other, the terminal one, is closed.
5. Formwork element, according to claim 4, characterised by the fact that it constitutes a lost element, designed to indefinitely become a part of the corresponding wall, to which it confers the thermal and acoustic insulation characteristics derived from its own nature.
6. Formwork element, according to claim 4, characterised by the fact that it is capable of housing therein, in addition to the said vertical and horizontal frameworks, pipes and conduits for auxiliary services such as water, electricity, or other, which are laterally accessible by cutting the corresponding prismatic body's wall.
US10/519,494 2002-07-01 2003-06-13 Formwork element Abandoned US20060010827A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
ESP200201525 2002-07-01
ES200201525A ES2199063B1 (en) 2002-07-01 2002-07-01 FORMWORK ELEMENT.
PCT/ES2003/000295 WO2004003308A1 (en) 2002-07-01 2003-06-13 Formwork element

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US20060010827A1 true US20060010827A1 (en) 2006-01-19

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US10/519,494 Abandoned US20060010827A1 (en) 2002-07-01 2003-06-13 Formwork element

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US (1) US20060010827A1 (en)
EP (1) EP1544368A1 (en)
JP (1) JP2005531703A (en)
CN (1) CN1665994A (en)
AU (1) AU2003238529A1 (en)
CA (1) CA2491098A1 (en)
ES (1) ES2199063B1 (en)
RU (1) RU2005101330A (en)
WO (1) WO2004003308A1 (en)

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US20060117690A1 (en) * 2004-12-07 2006-06-08 Buildblock Building Systems, L.L.C. Insulating concrete block
US20110162318A1 (en) * 2008-06-20 2011-07-07 Larry Bucheger Wall system
US20150218805A1 (en) * 2014-02-04 2015-08-06 Daniel Max Jensen Modular units for insulating concrete forms
US20170305759A1 (en) * 2016-04-22 2017-10-26 Localized Water Solutions LLC Water treatment method and system providing partial dynamic by-pass of water treatment stages
WO2020127805A1 (en) * 2018-12-20 2020-06-25 Daniel Mouton Shuttering element and associated set of shuttering elements
GR1010374B (en) * 2021-12-06 2023-01-16 Ρενατο Σπυρου Τολα Building system with unified elements without shuttering
WO2023223062A1 (en) * 2022-05-19 2023-11-23 Hajba Tamas Set of plastic building elements for the construction of wall structures and method for the construction of wall structures with the set of building elements

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ES1064034Y (en) * 2006-07-28 2007-05-01 Teais Sa EXPANDED POLYSTYRENE BLOCK WITH REINFORCEMENT ANCHORS FOR CONSTRUCTION CLOSURES
US8359808B2 (en) * 2009-11-16 2013-01-29 Solid Green Developments, LLC Polystyrene wall, system, and method for use in an insulated foam building
CA2733310C (en) * 2010-09-17 2013-09-03 Urbanetics Inc. Composite building module with a thermal mass radiator
GB201208358D0 (en) * 2012-05-14 2012-06-27 Ultraframe Uk Ltd Construction block and construction block assembly
NL2009796C2 (en) * 2012-11-13 2014-05-14 Sarda B V Building element for forming a wall of a building.
EP2927383A1 (en) * 2014-04-03 2015-10-07 Serguel G. Dorofeev Formwork for walls which are to be built
EP3045605B1 (en) * 2015-01-16 2019-09-04 Heinze Gruppe Verwaltungs GmbH Module for producing concrete elements
JP6946951B2 (en) * 2017-11-09 2021-10-13 宇部興産株式会社 Formwork for concrete specimens
CN108374507A (en) * 2018-05-04 2018-08-07 中清大装配式建筑有限公司 Assembled straight section vertically splices frivolous template

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US5699640A (en) * 1996-03-26 1997-12-23 Southeast Walls, Inc. Foam building block
US6536172B1 (en) * 1999-06-01 2003-03-25 Victor A. Amend Insulating construction form and manner of employment for same

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US20060117690A1 (en) * 2004-12-07 2006-06-08 Buildblock Building Systems, L.L.C. Insulating concrete block
US7739846B2 (en) * 2004-12-07 2010-06-22 Buildblock Building Systems, L.L.C. Insulating concrete form block including foam panel having inner row projections alternatingly flush with and set back from inner edge and different in size from outer row projections
US20110162318A1 (en) * 2008-06-20 2011-07-07 Larry Bucheger Wall system
US8201379B2 (en) * 2008-06-20 2012-06-19 Larry Bucheger Wall system
US8601759B2 (en) 2008-06-20 2013-12-10 Larry Bucheger Wall system
US20150218805A1 (en) * 2014-02-04 2015-08-06 Daniel Max Jensen Modular units for insulating concrete forms
US9650784B2 (en) * 2014-02-04 2017-05-16 Thermagreen Systems, Inc. Modular units for insulating concrete forms
US10053876B2 (en) 2014-02-04 2018-08-21 Thermagreen Systems, Inc. Mold for modular units for insulating concrete forms
US20170305759A1 (en) * 2016-04-22 2017-10-26 Localized Water Solutions LLC Water treatment method and system providing partial dynamic by-pass of water treatment stages
WO2020127805A1 (en) * 2018-12-20 2020-06-25 Daniel Mouton Shuttering element and associated set of shuttering elements
GR1010374B (en) * 2021-12-06 2023-01-16 Ρενατο Σπυρου Τολα Building system with unified elements without shuttering
WO2023223062A1 (en) * 2022-05-19 2023-11-23 Hajba Tamas Set of plastic building elements for the construction of wall structures and method for the construction of wall structures with the set of building elements

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ES2199063B1 (en) 2005-06-01
RU2005101330A (en) 2006-04-27
JP2005531703A (en) 2005-10-20
WO2004003308A1 (en) 2004-01-08
ES2199063A1 (en) 2004-02-01
AU2003238529A1 (en) 2004-01-19
CA2491098A1 (en) 2004-01-08
EP1544368A1 (en) 2005-06-22
CN1665994A (en) 2005-09-07

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