How Thomas Edison Tried and Failed to Make Single-Pour Concrete Homes

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Concrete is one of the most widely innovated and improved upon building technologies in the world. With applications in both pre-fabrication and continuous pouring, the material has become a hot-bed for applications in fabrication techniques, from incredible, monolithic forms, to 3D-printing.

But behind all of the successes, there have been countless failures, including a well-intended innovation by famous American inventor Thomas Edison. Filed on August 13, 1908, Edison’s ill-fated patent was a home that could be built with a single pour of concrete, reports Slate. Although Thomas Edison had previous ventures in concrete, including a cement plant in Stewartsville, New Jersey, as well as several patented improvements in the cement-making process, his venture into concrete construction may have just been too ambitious.

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Cite: Eric Oh. "How Thomas Edison Tried and Failed to Make Single-Pour Concrete Homes" 21 Feb 2016. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/781961/how-thomas-edison-tried-and-failed-to-make-single-pour-concrete-homes> ISSN 0719-8884

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