On Sun, 10 Mar 2013, Chris Zakes wrote:
> In "Red Planet" the humans live in domed colonies on Mars.
>
> "Each was a hemispherical bubble of silicone plastic, processed from
> the soil of Mars and blown on the spot. Each was a double bubble, in
> fact; first one large bubble would be blown, say thirty or forty feet
> across; when it had hardened,the new bubble would be entered through
> the tunnel and an inner bubble, slightly smaller than the first, would
> be blown. The outer bubble "polymerized"--that is to say, cured and
> hardened, under the rays of the sun; a battery of ultra-violet and
> heat lamps cured the inner. The walls were separated by a foot of dead
> air space, which providedinsulation against the bitter sub-zero nights
> of Mars."
>
> This isn't quite the same technology, it uses a special canvas
> impregnated with concrete that is first thoroughly soaked in water and
> then inflated somewhat like a kid's bounce-house until it hardens, at
> which point you have a permanent structure. But the Red Planet domes
> are definitely what it reminded me of.
>
>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vb1pdvvoVoQ
>
I wsa reading "Red Planet" again a few weeks ago, and I thought that
passage was about glass. Maybe "soild of Mars" made me think sand and thus
glass. Keep in mind that silicon is sand, silicone is what goes into
breast implants.
Of course, Heinlein did talk about making things out of glass in other
books. "Farmer in the Sky" definitely talks about buckets and other items
made from glass, simply because it's something that can be worked and
except for heat, the needed material is on the planet. I think he talks
of glass elsewhere.
That said, one of my favorite books is "The Starship and the Canoe" by
Kenneth Brower about George Dyson building big kayaks out of modern
material, and his father Freeman and his attempt to build starships with
Project Orion.
Those kayaks were made by making an aluminum frame, then covering with
canvas, and the whole thing waterproofed by epoxy. That sounds kind of
similar to this new process (of course, there was also ferrocement boat
that might have gotten mentioned in the book, but which definitely was
within George's vicinity). I think Heinlein's concept of glass or a glass
like substance is that it could be "blown", making a whole structure that
has no joined surfaces, so the whole thing is airtight (until they add the
door).
There's a new Woody Guthrie book out now (yes, I actually did read "Seeds
of Man") that has something to do with adobe construction, something that
had the advantage of being airtight compared to a wooden structure
(especially useful when the dust storm blows sand through the cracks in
the wood) and adobe is something that requires little manufactured items.
The real issue with "exotic" building materials is that most people live
in areas where there are restrictions and building codes, so they can't be
unique and ahve to spend money on a standard type of building. One reason
all the communes got away with geodesic domes and other unusual structures
was that they were away from civilization.
Michael