Responsive Image Banner

Water powers concrete removal

Premium Content

22 April 2014

The ERO machine uses hydrodemolition techniques to blast concrete away from any rebar and then separ

The ERO machine uses hydrodemolition techniques to blast concrete away from any rebar and then separates the waste for reuse

A hydrodemolition robot concept is currently being developed by a student at Umeå Institute of Design in Sweden, Omer Haciomeroglu. Called the ERO (short for erosion), the machine uses a high pressure water jet to erode concrete from around rebar and collects the cement, sand and aggregate and then separates it for recycling. Any rebar in the concrete structure is left in situ for reuse.

The machine is electrically powered and actually generates some of its own energy - as the vacuum sucks the waste down a tube, the moving air generates electricity that is reused by the machine.

Although currently just a concept, Omer is reported as being in discussion with a number of manufacturers and should these be successful a prototype could be produced and undergo testing within three years - the Atlas Copco branding pictured is therefore somewhat misleading.

Latest News
Sellafield awards £4.6bn nuclear decommissioning framework
The organisation that oversees the Sellafield nuclear facility in the UK has awarded a framework worth up to £4.6 billion to support high-hazard risk reduction and decommissioning
Less than a week to go: World Demolition Summit heads to Nashville
WDS brings global demolition and recycling experts together
CONNECT WITH THE TEAM
Lewis Tyler Editor Tel: +44(0) 7566 799988 E-mail: [email protected]
Peter Collinson International Sales Manager Tel: +44 (0) 1892 786220 E-mail: [email protected]
CONNECT WITH SOCIAL MEDIA
Demolition & Recycling International and Construction Briefing Newsletter

Your Industry Brief: Construction, Demolition & Recycling

Stay ahead with the latest industry insights, project updates and expert analysis — straight to your inbox.

It’s free, relevant and quick to sign up.

Sign me up