Innovative Startup to Make ‘Carbon Negative’ Building Materials From Grass

One of the most common lumber products used by home builders is OSB, which stands for Oriented Strand Board. It is not to be confused with particle board, which is basically sawdust and resin. With its limited structural strength, particle board is used primarily in furniture, cabinetry and countertops, typically under Formica.

OSB is a structural replacement for plywood, and is used extensively by builders for roof, wall and floor sheathing. It is also used in manufactured floor joists and is the skin material for structural insulated panels (SIPs).

Www.Naturallywood.com explains that OSB “is made from wood strands 8 to 15 centimeters long. It uses the whole tree and makes use of crooked, knotty and deformed trees that would otherwise go unused.” Although that’s an economical use of waste timber, OSB is not as sustainable as the product invented by Plantd, an Oxford, NC, startup which won the “Most Innovative Startup” award from the National Association of Home Builders at this year’s International Builders Show (IBS) in Las Vegas.

What the company invented was an OSB substitute made from a proprietary grass that grows to 20 feet tall in a single season, drawing CO2 out of the atmosphere far quicker than trees do. The company claims that 14,000 acres of grass plantations can produce as much material as 400,000 acres of managed timber lands. These qualities make Plantd’s grass a superior crop for addressing climate change, which was the original objective of the company’s founders. “At Plantd,” says the company’s press release, “we are leading a shift to materials made from renewable grass and building the factory of the future to ensure atmospheric carbon captured in the field is locked away inside the walls and floors of new homes.” Here’s a great 10-minute video: https://youtu.be/tzuuEFemVDY

With $10 million in venture capital, the company will manufacture its “carbon negative building materials” in a former cigarette factory. Moreover, the farmers who previously grew tobacco will now be growing the grass needed by the factory, helping the local economy recover from the closing of the cigarette factory.

The company has been getting lots of national press, which you can read at www.PlantdMaterials.com.

Plantd is now constructing the first of its automated, modular, all-electric production lines at its new facility, with a target to open within the next 12 months, according to the May 3rd press release.

Here’s an excerpt from the website’s home page: “Throughout history, civilizations have advanced at the speed of material innovation. Timber, steel, and concrete enabled remarkable progress, but today they are the problem, not the solution. Continuing to build with these materials accelerates climate change and promises to impede progress by threatening our future on this planet. We see a world built from grass. A world where buildings no longer cause climate change but are central to the solution. Where they are stronger, more durable, and more affordable.”

Plantd’s founders, left to right: Josh Dorfman, CEO; Nathan Silvernail, COO; and Huade Tan, CTO. The latter two were formerly engineers at SpaceX.

The website claims that their product will be stronger, lighter, more moisture resistant, carbon negative, and will cost the same as regular OSB.

Plantd’s panels have just two ingredients: the perennial grass plus a small amount of resin (with the formaldehyde reacted out before reaches Plantd’s factory). This creates a low-VOC product with fewer chemical additives compared to other products, according to Plantd.

YouTube Playlist Features Over 40 ‘Top Green Products’ from the International Builders Show

I would have loved to attend the 2023 International Builders Show in Las Vegas to check out the vendors of green products, but I have a job here that already keeps me pretty busy.  So I was delighted to receive a link to a YouTube playlist of over 40 videos featuring many of the same products that would have interested me.

In those videos Rate It Green host Matt Hoots of Sawhorse Inc. shares his picks for some of the best green building products from IBS. You’ll certainly make some new discoveries, as I did, and appreciate Matt’s insights. Many of these products I already knew about and some of them I have mentioned in this column (such as the Rheem heat pump water heater, which I bought for my home), but I didn’t make videos of them. He did. Thank you, Matt!

The videos are a great service, with the shortest ones being under two minutes and only one of them being over 10 minutes. Each of them is a short visit to a different IBS 2023 booth, interviewing the attendant about their product. It would have taken me a few days to do the same thing, with most of my time spent walking up and down the aisles looking for products that interested me and blowing off those which didn’t.

The nice thing about a YouTube playlist is that all the videos are listed next to the one you’re viewing, so you can skip to the ones that interest you the most or skip to the next video as soon as you’ve seen enough of the one you’re watching.

Click here for the link for the YouTube playlist.

Here are the video titles that stood out for me:

> 3D Printed Homes: Is This the Future of Housing?

> Modern Heat Pump Designed to Work in Hot and Cold Climates

> Rheem Heat Pump Water Heater to Replace Gas

> This Toilet Could Have Saved Me $1,000 in Water Bills

> Revolutionizing Construction With Plaex Building Systems

> Gas Appliance Manufacturer Now Going Green With Induction Cooktops and Cookware

> What Is the Difference Between Induction and Electric Cooktops?

> Customized Switches and Sensors to Help with Indoor Air Quality

> Cold Weather Heat Pump Advice

> Hubers Zip Wall System: Air and Water Sealing Sheathing

> Toto’s Washlet and Wall Hung Toilet Systems — Saving Water & Toilet Paper

> Ventilation: Air Filtration and Humidity Management

> Panasonic Energy Recovery  Ventilators (ERVs) Explained

> Neolith Sintered Stone: Sustainable Countertops, Shower Systems and Rainscreens

> AZEK Decks: Recycled Content, Eco-Friendly, Durable Decking

> A Smarter Way to Add Solar to Your Roof: Solar Shingles

I suggest you take notes as you watch these videos and create a menu of possible upgrades you could make to your home. Then review that menu and decide what to implement first.

I should add that watching the playlist is “sustainable” in itself—you didn’t add to your carbon footprint by traveling to Las Vegas, and you didn’t come home with a bag full of handouts that will only go into the recycling bin!