>>2767332Correct, you can still use wood for frame work however, cutting out wood wall paneling in the build process reduces the wood needed for any house by 30-50% right off the bat. I posted this in a thread previously on this topic.
-hempcrete
-aircrete
-roman concrete (wasn't invented by romans however, add two kinds/sizes of finely grounded volcanic ash to the standard portland mix, add salt water)
-pseudo ancient (megalithic) geopolymer of the limestone type (sodium silicate, sodium carbonate, calcium carbonate, crushed limestone, ionized salt water, crushed volcanic pumice) can be caked in an erosion resistant geopolymer after hardening
-adobe/mud-straw brick (ideal in drier and hotter climates), you can also make this yourself with sand and normal soil and straw bales extremely cheaply
-straw bale blocks caked in a geopolymer mix (ideal in drier temperate and drier hotter climates, steppe climates)
-use polygonal cyclopean walling techniques for hardstone blocks to increase structural integrity, use at least two different sizes of blocks and stack them together like a puzzle set with or without mortar, in seismic stress zones this technique holds far superior to conventional brick stacking
Geopolymers work better in wetter and colder climates, especially if you use polygonal/cyclopean stacking and add sodium silicate, ionized salt water, and volcanic pumice to the mix, when done right you get a stone that is more erosion resistant that natural limestones and even some granites, ie it will last thousands of years and your house will fall apart structurally long before the stone breaks down.