Roland Brunschweiler and Pascal Minder spent an entire semester working on and tinkering with the ideal material mix for their concrete canoe "TruchETH" as part of their bachelor's degree thesis. Yesterday, their four-meter, 90-kilogram vessel was finally loaded for transport to Brandenburg an der Havel, along with the willow canoe from the concrete canoe club at ETH Zurich. At the regatta, 80 student teams from 30 institutions all over Europe compete against each other. The teams will be evaluated not only on the speed with which they complete the course but also on the design and construction of the canoe.
In the past, the Zurich teams have regularly received top marks, especially in the construction category. This year, however, Brunschweiler and Minder targeted the sustainability prize. What makes "TruchETH" special is its reinforcement, which is made entirely of recycled clothing. For this, the two cut used jeans and t-shirts into strips of fabric and wove them together.
The resulting mesh functions similarly to a fiberglass fabric and absorbs the variable forces that occur. The textile mesh was then coated with several layers of "concrete" based on environmentally friendly cement and vegetable charcoal. These natural additives serve to sequester the emitted carbon dioxide by storing it inside the concrete.
Cycle of waste
"When you hear of a canoe made of fabric and concrete, sustainability might not immediately come to mind," says Bachelor student Pascal Minder from the Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering (D-BAUG). "But sustainability, like waste, has many faces." The two students were shaken by external page a report on Swiss television that documented how Western countries send nearly unimaginable quantities of old clothes to developing countries every year. Although these textiles are intended as donations, most cannot be used and frequently end up in the sea or are burned – such as in Ghana, where 160 tons of textiles arrive every day.
With their canoe, Brunschweiler and Minder want to create solutions for these two challenges: on one hand, for the problem of embodied CO2 emissions in the construction industry, and on the other, for the vast amounts of waste generated by the fast-fashion industry. During their four-month development and experimentation phase, they found that textiles make a very good bond with concrete. "Textiles have very interesting properties," says Brunschweiler, who is also a student in civil engineering. "And you can really do a lot with it. With our canoe made of textiles and concrete, we want to show that old clothes can be recycled and reutilized in manifold ways, for example in the construction industry."