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Article Title: Frequently Asked Bamboo Questions and Answers
Author: David Sands
Category: Environment, Home, Science
Word Count: 800
Keywords: bamboo, green homes, green home, eco-friendly, green building, 
environment, eco house, LEED, green
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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Bamboo is often referred by many people as being a tree, others are quick to 
call a grass. Some people will tell you that it takes a long time to grow, 
others would say that it literally shoots up over-night. Do you know the basic 
facts about this fascinating plant?

Is Bamboo a Tree?
Bamboo is a grass, it is the fastest growing plant on Earth. It grows one third 
faster than the fastest growing tree. Some species grow as much as four feet a 
day.

How long does it normally take to grow?
Bamboo takes only 3-5 years before it can be harvested for the first time, 
versus 10-50 years for most softwoods and hardwoods. Thanks to its rapid 
growth, the yield (weight per acreage and year) is up to 25 times higher than 
that of timber.

Is it eco-friendly?
Bamboo can be harvested and replenished with virtually no impact to the 
environment. Every year it can be selectively harvested and is capable of 
regeneration without needing to be replanted. In Costa Rica, 1000 bamboo houses 
are built annually with material coming from the same 150 acre bamboo 
plantation.

What makes using bamboo better than trees?
With a 10-30 percent annual increase in biomass versus 2-5 percent for trees, 
bamboo creates greater yields of raw material for use. One bamboo clump can 
produce 200 poles in the five years it takes one tree to reach maturity. The 
plant is definitely a viable replacement for wood. 

What is bamboo used for?
It is a renewable resource for agroforestry production. It is used to produce 
flooring, wall paneling, pulp for paper, fencing, briquettes for fuel, raw 
material for housing, and more. 

Is bamboo strong enough?
Bamboo is one of the strongest building materials in the world, it has twice 
the compression strength of concrete and roughly the same strength-to-weight 
ratio of steel. It withstands up to 52,000 pounds of pressure psi. 

What kind of bamboo is used to build with?
Homes are usually made with a special Timber bamboo species. The poles used in 
the houses are 3 and a half inches in diameter and the wall of the bamboo pole 
is three quarters of an inch in thickness. The hollow tube shape gives a 
strength factor of 1.9 times more than an equivalent solid wood beam.

How do bamboo homes hold up against hurricanes?
The exceptionally strong and flexible poles are able to withstand the extreme 
forces imposed on a house during hurricanes and earthquakes. Bamboo homes 
withstood 3 hurricanes with winds at 173m.p.h. in the Cook Islands in Polynesia 
in 2005. Meanwhile, most of the wood frame houses on the island were damaged 
beyond repair.

Can the homes wisthstand earthquakes?
All of the twenty bamboo houses built for the National Bamboo Foundation 
survived a 7.5 Richter scale earthquake in Costa Rica in April 1991. An 
earthquake in Colombia in January 1999 also destroyed 75 percent of the 
buildings in the region, however, the bamboo structures survived uniformly 
unscathed. 

How does bamboo help with Global Warming?
It offers the quickest way to remove the vast amounts of carbon dioxide from 
the atmosphere. Each acre of bamboo isolates up to 40 tons of CO2. It eats 
carbon dioxide!

The plant takes CO2 from the atmosphere and turns it into sugars, through the 
process of photosynthesis, then transforms these sugars into the compounds that 
make up bamboo fiber. The CO2 from the atmosphere is thus locked up in the 
bamboo fiber itself. The bamboo fiber is then used to construct green 
buildings, leaving the carbon within it sequestered for the entire lifetime of 
the building.

Bamboo homes are a carbon capture and storage system, a 1,000 sq. ft. green 
home built by Bamboo Living has approximately 15 tons of carbon dioxide locked 
up (sequestered) within its fibers.

What are other benefits of growing the plant?
Bamboo is a natural control barrier. Because of its wide spread root system and 
large canopy it greatly reduces rain run-off, prevents massive soil erosion and 
doubles the size of watersheds. 

It also helps mitigate water pollution, due to its high nitrogen consumption, 
making it the perfect solution for excess nutrient uptake of waste water from 
manufacturing, intensive livestock farming, and sewage treatment facilities. 

Unlike most trees, proper harvesting does not kill the plant so topsoil is held 
in place. Additionally, because of its litter on the dense forest floor it 
actually feeds the topsoil over time. This will provide healthy agricultural 
lands for other crops for generations to come.

Does bamboo have any medicinal purposes?
Current research points to there being potential in a number of medical uses. 
Secretion from bamboo is used internally to treat asthma, coughs, and can be 
used as an aphrodisiac. Ingredients from the root help treat kidney disease. 
Roots and leaves have also been used to treat venereal disease and cancer. Sap 
is said to reduce fever, and ash will cure prickly heat.

David Sands is a renowned green building architect and bamboo expert. You can 
learn more about bamboo and green homes by visiting http://www.bambooliving.com
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