Cottages, built using Canadian technology, that is, frame-chita (or “sandwich”), are affordable, durable, environmentally friendly. This technology itself, developed in Canada after the war, when the flow of immigrants from states that suffered from Nazi invaders poured into the country and it was necessary to urgently provide refugees with inexpensive and reliable housing, and is popular all over the world for more than 50 years.
Most houses in North America, Japan and Scandinavia were built precisely using this technology. In Russia, despite the fact that it became interested in it immediately after the invention, light elegant houses from sandwich panels then did not gain confession among the people. However, now, when low -rise construction is again experiencing the rise, this type of construction of residential buildings has become very popular and real estate in Chelyabinsk and other cities of Russia has become more accessible to poor people.
The popularity of houses built using Canadian technology is quite deserved. Among its reasons are the following: the speed of erecting a house (from laying the foundation to the housewarming passes only a few weeks).Environmental friendliness and safety. Strength and resistance to external influences.
The technology itself is simple, like all ingenious. Panels made of plywood and hyposcarton are sequentially sequentially sequentially sequentially sequentially sequent. By the way, despite the fact that such houses seem fragile, it is the cottages made using frame-chopping technology that remained whole with a destructive earthquake in Japan. They are well adapted to harsh climate (such houses are built even in the Far North).