Eight billion fasteners a year—every one a hole. Magnetic cement replaces them, turning walls into attachment surfaces without damage or hardware.
By Futurist Thomas Frey
Eight billion pounds. That’s the estimated weight of nails, screws, anchors, and wall fasteners consumed by the global construction industry every single year. Each one punches a hole. Each one leaves a mark. Each one represents a method of attaching things to walls that hasn’t fundamentally changed since the Roman Empire was mixing volcanic ash with lime.
A 29-year-old industrial engineering student from Argentina named Marco Agustín Secchi thinks that’s about to change. And the material he’s developed is so elegantly simple that the hardest part is convincing people it’s real.
He calls it Ironplac. It’s magnetic cement. And the idea is exactly what it sounds like.
Continue reading… “The Wall That Holds Everything Without a Single Hole”
