More than 600,000 recycled plastic bottles went into making the 3-bedroom abode.

Bottles, Baby

At first glance, the newly constructed beachfront home in Meteghan River, Nova Scotia, looks like any other. It has a kitchen, three bedrooms, a pair of bathrooms, a roof...

But while the house's appearance is unremarkable, the structure is wholly unique — because JD Composites built it from more than 600,000 recycled plastic bottles.

"There are four major companies building this material in the world," company co-owner David Saulnier told CBC News, "and they’ve told me that we’re the only people, on planet Earth, that have done this so far."

Little Plastic Castle

The material is called PET (polyethylene terephthalate) foam, and the first step to creating it is heating shredded plastic to form tiny plastic pellets.

"All of these pellets go into big vats, and it goes into a building the size of Walmart," JD Composites co-owner Joel German told The Hants Journal. "Four guys operate this plant and they dump it into a hopper. It gets mixed with gases. It melts it down and makes it come out in a foam, like shaving cream it expands on the way out.”

Once cool, the foam is incredibly durable, so it made the perfect building material for the green home, which the team plans to list on Airbnb if it doesn't sell.

"The house is rot resistant, mildew resistant, termite resistant in warmer climates," Saulnier told Hants. "It’s just an efficient, structurally insulated panel made with green material."

READ MORE: This house was built using 600,000 recycled plastic bottles [CBC News]

More on plastic bottles: You’re Probably Drinking Microplastics With Your Bottled Water


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