Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Tuesday, 30 June 2026

Square Plastic Bottles for House Constructions

 


Hemen Parekh

Founder, RecruitGuru.com & 3P Consultants

Mumbai, India

www.hemenparekh.ai

30 June 2026

Shri Manohar Lal Khattar Ji

Hon'ble Union Minister

Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs

Government of India

Nirman Bhawan, New Delhi

Subject:  A Proposal for Nesting Square Bottle-Brick (NSBB) Housing — Converting Plastic Waste into Low-Cost Construction Material for PMAY-U 2.0

Respected Khattar Ji,

I write to you again, following our earlier exchange on 3D-printed construction technology, with a second proposal that I believe merits the Ministry's attention — one that addresses two national challenges with a single manufacturing intervention: the rising tide of non-biodegradable plastic waste, and the continuing shortfall in low-cost housing for India's urban and rural poor under PMAY-U 2.0.

The core idea is not new to me. I first proposed it in a blog post titled “Turning a Threat into an Opportunity?”, published on 23 December 2017, in which I suggested that the plastic bottle industry be encouraged to move away from round bottles toward square, stackable, screw-top-and-bottom bottles — designed from the outset so that, after their use as containers, they could be assembled, Lego-like, into the walls of small single-storey homes for the homeless. That post itself drew on an even earlier blog, “A People's Home?” (16 January 2012), which had asked why Tata's success with a Rs. 100,000 People's Car could not be replicated with a Rs. 32,000 People's Home.

In the years since, the urgency of the plastic waste problem has only grown, even as experiments with bottle-built and foam-dome housing (such as Japan's quake-resistant polystyrene dome houses, which I cited in my original post) have demonstrated that lightweight, insulated, low-cost shelter from unconventional materials is structurally credible.

I have now worked with Claude (Anthropic's AI assistant) to convert this 2017 concept into a detailed engineering specification — a three-size nesting family of square HDPE bottles (1L, 4L, and 9L), each sharing a common wall thickness and thread pitch, with vertical alignment grooves on all four faces and a novel dual-thread closure: both the cap AND the base are screw-removable. This allows the bottles to be used conventionally during their primary life as containers, and then — without any melting, shredding, or reprocessing — thread-joined directly into structural columns and dry-stacked into infill walls. A further refinement allows the same bottle shell to serve two distinct functions depending only on what is poured through the neck: sand or local debris at load-bearing points for compressive strength, and loosely packed dried grass, leaves, rice husk, or coir at non-load-bearing infill courses for heat insulation — the same principle that gives straw-bale construction its thermal performance, here delivered at near-zero material cost from seasonal agricultural waste. The complete specification, including dimensions, thread design, assembly sequence, indicative thermal performance, and a bill of materials for a 20 m² housing unit, is enclosed.

I wish to be transparent that several engineering parameters in the enclosed specification — compressive strength under sustained load, fire safety classification, long-term creep behaviour of HDPE, and the indicative thermal (R-value) performance of the grass/leaf-fill option — are first-order estimates that require laboratory validation, not yet proven figures. I would respectfully request the Ministry's consideration for a small pilot study, possibly routed through the Global Housing Technology Challenge – India (GHTC-India) or a CPWD-affiliated research cell, to test a limited run of prototype units and validate these parameters under Indian conditions.

If validated, this approach could offer Indian beverage and packaging manufacturers a near-zero-cost path to participate in affordable housing delivery — diverting plastic waste at the point of manufacture rather than after disposal, and giving PMAY-U 2.0 beneficiaries a DIY-assemblable building material sourced from their own immediate environment.

I would be honoured if the Ministry's technical wing could review the enclosed specification and advise whether this concept warrants further engineering evaluation. I remain available, along with my technical collaborator, to provide any additional detail the Ministry may require.

Thank you for your time and your continuing attention to India's housing challenge.

With respectful regards,

 

Hemen Parekh

hcpblogs@gmail.com  |  www.hemenparekh.ai

Encl: NSBB — Nesting Square Bottle-Brick System: Engineering Specification (1 document)

Ref: “Turning a Threat into an Opportunity?”, 23 Dec 2017, myblogepage.blogspot.com  |  “A People's Home?”, 16 Jan 2012

===================================================

 THE NESTING SQUARE BOTTLE-BRICK (NSBB) SYSTEM

An Engineering Specification for Dual-Purpose Stackable Plastic Bottles

Concept: Hemen Parekh (Dec 2017)  •  Engineering Detailing: In dialogue with Claude (Anthropic)  •  June 2026

 

1.  Concept Summary

The NSBB system replaces conventional round plastic bottles with a family of three square-cross-section bottles that (a) function as ordinary liquid containers during their primary use, and (b) convert, after use, into structural building blocks for low-cost single-storey housing — without any reprocessing, melting, or shredding. The same bottle that held water becomes, unmodified, a brick.

Three design moves make this possible: a square (not round) cross-section so units stack and tile without gaps; a nesting nomenclature where each smaller size's outer footprint equals the next size's inner cavity, so empty bottles collapse into each other for transport; and a dual-thread closure — both the lid AND the base are screw-removable — so the hollow cylindrical neck of one bottle can be threaded directly into the socket of the bottle above it, turning a stack of bottles into a load-bearing column.

2.  The Three-Size Nesting Family

All three sizes share the same wall thickness, thread pitch, groove spacing, and material — only the footprint and height scale. This commonality means one mould-tooling family (3 cavity inserts, shared core pins) produces all three SKUs.

Parameter

NSBB-1L (Beverage)

NSBB-4L (Jerry-size)

NSBB-9L (Structural)

Footprint (external)

90 × 90 mm

143 × 143 mm

190 × 190 mm

Height (body, excl. neck)

210 mm

280 mm

330 mm

Total height (incl. neck + cap)

248 mm

318 mm

368 mm

Internal volume

1.0 L

4.0 L

9.0 L

Corner radius (ext.)

6 mm

8 mm

10 mm

Wall thickness

0.45 mm

0.55 mm

0.65 mm

Empty weight (HDPE)

≈ 28 g

≈ 78 g

≈ 145 g

Nests inside

NSBB-9L cavity

(largest unit)

As-brick footprint match

4 units = 1 NSBB-4L face

2 × 2 grid of NSBB-1L

Base course / corner unit

Why these exact numbers:

       90 mm is close to standard brick width (90–100 mm per BIS 1077), so a wall built from NSBB-1L units matches conventional masonry coursing tables Indian masons already know.

       143 mm ≈ 90 mm × √(4/1.6) keeps the 1L-to-4L volume step practical for a household refill bottle, while 143² × 280 mm gives almost exactly 4.0 L net of wall taper.

       190 mm matches two NSBB-1L units side by side (2 × 90 + 10 mm groove/gap allowance) — so a 9L unit's footprint exactly tiles with four 1L units beneath it in a running bond pattern.

3.  Stacking & Nesting Geometry

3.1  Vertical Nesting Grooves (Lego Function)

       Each of the 4 flat vertical faces carries 2 parallel grooves, 4 mm wide × 2.5 mm deep, running the full height of the body, spaced symmetrically at 25% and 75% of face width.

       Matching ridges (4 mm × 2.2 mm, 0.3 mm clearance) project from the underside of the base — so a bottle set down on top of another locks laterally, preventing the stack from sliding under wind or seismic shear.

       Groove position is identical across all 3 sizes (same 25%/75% rule) — so a 1L unit can sit centred and locked atop a 4L unit's face without custom alignment.

3.2  Dual-Thread Closure (Column Function)

       Neck (top): standard PCO 1881-style finish, 28 mm bore, 3-start thread, 8 mm lead — compatible with standard capping lines, so existing bottling plants need no retooling.

       Base (bottom): a recessed 28 mm threaded boss, internal thread, identical pitch to the neck. Protected by a flush screw-on base cap (same mould as the lid, different colour) during normal liquid-carrying use.

       Conversion step: unscrew both lid and base cap. The exposed male neck of the lower bottle threads directly into the exposed female base boss of the bottle above — forming a continuous hollow column. A 6 mm GI rebar can be dropped through this hollow column for vertical reinforcement, turning a stack of bottles into a true RCC-equivalent column.

       Once joined, each threaded joint is rated to resist approximately 40 kg axial pull-out force (HDPE thread engagement, 12 mm depth) — sufficient for a single-storey wall height of 8–10 stacked units (assuming joints are also grout-filled per Section 5).

4.  Material & Manufacturing

Spec

Detail

Resin

HDPE, blow-grade, MFI 0.3–0.5 g/10min (same resin class as existing 1L–5L bottles — no new tooling material)

Process

Extrusion blow moulding (EBM) for body; injection moulding for lid/base-cap inserts

Wall taper

Corners +15% thickness over flat-face wall, to resist stacking point-loads at the 4 vertical edges

Colour

Natural/clear for beverage use; manufacturer may offer a UV-stabilised grey "build-grade" SKU for units sold directly as bricks (no liquid-contact certification needed, lower resin cost)

UV stability

HALS stabiliser package added at 0.3% for build-grade SKU — gives 5+ year outdoor service life for exposed wall units

Recyclability

Mono-material HDPE (cap, base-cap and body all same resin) — fully recyclable as a single stream if a unit is ever decommissioned

5.  From Bottles to a Wall — Assembly Logic

1.    Empty, rinsed bottles are filled through the open neck (after lid removal) with one of two locally available fill types, chosen by wall function — see Section 5A for the full comparison: dry sand, fly ash, or crushed construction debris for load-bearing/structural units; or loosely packed dried grass, rice husk, coconut coir, or dry leaves for insulating/infill units, where thermal performance matters more than compressive strength.

2.    The base cap is screwed back on, sealing the fill in place.

3.    Units are laid in running-bond courses (1L units offset by half-width on alternate rows), using the vertical grooves to self-align — a DIY builder needs no spirit level for lateral alignment, only for course height.

4.    At door/window jambs and corners, lid+base-cap are removed and units are thread-joined vertically (Section 3.2) with a rebar core, creating the equivalent of an RCC column at load-bearing points — the rest of the wall remains dry-stacked, sand-filled infill.

5.    A thin (10–15 mm) cement-sand slurry is brushed into the exposed groove channels between courses for weatherproofing and added shear resistance — this is the only "wet trade" step in the entire build.

6.    Roof: standard GI sheet or pre-cast micro-concrete panel, resting on the thread-joined corner/jamb columns — identical to existing low-cost housing roofing practice, no new roofing technology required.

5A.  Fill Material — Structural Sand vs. Insulating Grass/Leaf Fill

Sand-filled units (Section 5, default for structural courses) are strong in compression but conduct heat readily — sand's thermal conductivity is in the same range as ordinary brick, offering little protection against India's peak ambient temperatures. For non-load-bearing infill courses, particularly on east- and west-facing walls that take direct sun, NSBB units can instead be filled with a loose, dry, fibrous material. The principle is identical to straw-bale construction, a building method with a century of documented thermal performance: insulating value comes not from the fibre itself but from the still air trapped between fibres, and dry plant fibre is an excellent trap for it.

Fill material

Approx. thermal conductivity (W/m·K)

Indicative R-value (90mm fill)

Local availability

Dry sand (structural)

0.25 – 0.35

≈ 0.25 – 0.36 m²K/W

Universal, but adds no insulation

Dried grass / hay, loose-packed

0.04 – 0.06

≈ 1.5 – 2.25 m²K/W

Agricultural waste, post-harvest

Dry leaves, loose-packed

0.05 – 0.07

≈ 1.3 – 1.8 m²K/W

Seasonal, urban + rural

Rice husk

0.045 – 0.06

≈ 1.5 – 2.0 m²K/W

Abundant near paddy-growing belts

Coconut coir / husk fibre

0.04 – 0.05

≈ 1.8 – 2.25 m²K/W

Coastal regions, coir-processing belts

Mineral wool (reference benchmark)

0.035 – 0.04

≈ 2.25 – 2.6 m²K/W

Industrial, not locally sourced

Reading the table:

       A grass- or leaf-filled NSBB unit performs within roughly 65–85% of a mineral wool benchmark at zero material cost, against sand's near-zero insulating contribution. The R-value gap between sand and grass fill, over a 90mm wall thickness, is large enough to be the difference between an indoor wall surface that radiates heat back into a room through the afternoon, and one that stays close to ambient through the day.

       Figures above are derived from published material-science ranges for loose-packed natural fibre insulation, not from NSBB-specific lab testing — they belong in the same pilot-validation category as the structural figures in Section 8, and should be confirmed with a thermal chamber test on filled prototype units before being quoted as guaranteed performance.

       Recommended hybrid wall design: sand- or debris-filled NSBB-9L units at the base course and at all thread-joined structural columns (Section 3.2), where compressive load matters most; grass- or leaf-filled NSBB-1L and NSBB-4L units for the upper infill courses and any sun-facing façade, where thermal comfort matters most. This mirrors standard composite-wall practice — a structural skin paired with a separate insulating layer — except here both functions are delivered by the identical bottle shell, differing only in what is poured through the neck.

       A secondary benefit: loose plant fibre is far lighter than sand (bulk density roughly one-tenth to one-fifth), which reduces the dead load on thread-joined columns and on the foundation — a meaningful advantage for single-storey informal-settlement construction where foundations are often minimal.

       Moisture management: dry fibre fill must remain dry to retain its insulating value and resist fungal growth. The sealed base cap (Section 3.2) and grouted grooves (Section 5, step 5) already address this for structural units; insulating units additionally benefit from a light dusting of lime or ash mixed into the fill, a traditional moisture- and pest-deterrent used in thatch and straw-bale construction.

5A.  Fill Material — Structural Sand vs. Insulating Grass/Leaf Fill

Sand-filled units (Section 5, default for structural courses) are strong in compression but conduct heat readily — sand's thermal conductivity is in the same range as ordinary brick, offering little protection against India's peak ambient temperatures. For non-load-bearing infill courses, particularly on east- and west-facing walls that take direct sun, NSBB units can instead be filled with a loose, dry, fibrous material. The principle is identical to straw-bale construction, a building method with a century of documented thermal performance: insulating value comes not from the fibre itself but from the still air trapped between fibres, and dry plant fibre is an excellent trap for it.

Fill material

Approx. thermal conductivity (W/m·K)

Indicative R-value (90mm fill)

Local availability

Dry sand (structural)

0.25 – 0.35

≈ 0.25 – 0.36 m²K/W

Universal, but adds no insulation

Dried grass / hay, loose-packed

0.04 – 0.06

≈ 1.5 – 2.25 m²K/W

Agricultural waste, post-harvest

Dry leaves, loose-packed

0.05 – 0.07

≈ 1.3 – 1.8 m²K/W

Seasonal, urban + rural

Rice husk

0.045 – 0.06

≈ 1.5 – 2.0 m²K/W

Abundant near paddy-growing belts

Coconut coir / husk fibre

0.04 – 0.05

≈ 1.8 – 2.25 m²K/W

Coastal regions, coir-processing belts

Mineral wool (reference benchmark)

0.035 – 0.04

≈ 2.25 – 2.6 m²K/W

Industrial, not locally sourced

Reading the table:

       A grass- or leaf-filled NSBB unit performs within roughly 65–85% of a mineral wool benchmark at zero material cost, against sand's near-zero insulating contribution. The R-value gap between sand and grass fill, over a 90mm wall thickness, is large enough to be the difference between an indoor wall surface that radiates heat back into a room through the afternoon, and one that stays close to ambient through the day.

       Figures above are derived from published material-science ranges for loose-packed natural fibre insulation, not from NSBB-specific lab testing — they belong in the same pilot-validation category as the structural figures in Section 8, and should be confirmed with a thermal chamber test on filled prototype units before being quoted as guaranteed performance.

       Recommended hybrid wall design: sand- or debris-filled NSBB-9L units at the base course and at all thread-joined structural columns (Section 3.2), where compressive load matters most; grass- or leaf-filled NSBB-1L and NSBB-4L units for the upper infill courses and any sun-facing façade, where thermal comfort matters most. This mirrors standard composite-wall practice — a structural skin paired with a separate insulating layer — except here both functions are delivered by the identical bottle shell, differing only in what is poured through the neck.

       A secondary benefit: loose plant fibre is far lighter than sand (bulk density roughly one-tenth to one-fifth), which reduces the dead load on thread-joined columns and on the foundation — a meaningful advantage for single-storey informal-settlement construction where foundations are often minimal.

       Moisture management: dry fibre fill must remain dry to retain its insulating value and resist fungal growth. The sealed base cap (Section 3.2) and grouted grooves (Section 5, step 5) already address this for structural units; insulating units additionally benefit from a light dusting of lime or ash mixed into the fill, a traditional moisture- and pest-deterrent used in thatch and straw-bale construction.

6.  Indicative House Unit (20 m² model, per 2011 Tata reference)

Item

Quantity / Note

Wall units (NSBB-1L equivalent)

≈ 2,400 units for a 20 m² single-room footprint, 2.4 m wall height — base courses + columns sand-filled; upper courses and sun-facing façade grass/leaf-filled (Section 5A)

Structural columns (thread-joined)

8 corner/jamb columns × 9 units each (using NSBB-9L for ground course, tapering to 4L/1L) = 72 units, sand-filled

Fill material — structural

Local sand/debris — zero transport cost if sourced on-site

Fill material — insulating

Dried grass, leaves, rice husk, or coir — zero-cost seasonal agricultural waste

Assembly time (DIY, 2 people)

6–8 days, matching the Tata People's Home 7-day target cited in the original blog

Estimated material cost

Bottles: collected/diverted waste stream (near-zero cost if municipal collection partnership in place); incremental cost is the threaded base-cap retrofit only

7.  What Is New vs. What Already Exists

Empty-bottle and foam-dome housing (Japan Dome House, cited in the original 2017 blog) already proves that bottle/foam-based walls are structurally viable and insulating. What NSBB adds is a manufacturing-stage design intervention — the bottle is engineered from the factory floor to be a brick, rather than a discarded bottle being repurposed informally. This removes the two biggest failure points of informal bottle-house construction: irregular shapes that leave gaps, and the absence of any mechanical joint between units (informal builds rely entirely on mortar/mud packing).

8.  Open Engineering Questions for Pilot Testing

       Actual compressive strength of a sand-filled HDPE unit under real wall load (lab test needed — figures above are first-order estimates, not yet validated).

       Long-term creep behaviour of HDPE under sustained compressive load at Indian ambient temperatures (35–45°C).

       Fire safety classification — HDPE's behaviour in a sand-filled, sealed-unit configuration differs from loose plastic and needs independent testing against National Building Code fire norms.

       Thread durability over repeated assembly/disassembly cycles if units are ever reclaimed and reused.

 

Original Concept: Hemen Parekh, “Turning a Threat into an Opportunity?”, 23 December 2017, myblogepage.blogspot.com

Original Concept: Hemen Parekh, “Turning a Threat into an Opportunity?”, 23 December 2017, myblogepage.blogspot.com