The Secret Ingredient in Paris’ Green Public Housing: Hemp

As an insulating material within walls, "hempcrete" holds the potential to transform the homes where we reside in ways that are healthier for people and the planet alike. 

(Illustration by Amelia Bates/Grist)

This is your first of three free stories this month. Become a free or sustaining member to read unlimited articles, webinars and ebooks.

Become A Member

Winter in Paris is notoriously clammy, and this winter was no exception. But Gregory Ferembach didn’t need to turn on his heat much. One reason? The walls in his public housing building are lined with one of nature’s best insulation materials: hemp.

“We’re never cold in winter,” Ferembach said in French. “The kids walk around barefoot all the time, or even in their underwear.”

Ferembach says it helps that their apartment is on a middle floor, and their building is sandwiched between two others. But the coziness also owes to the unique material in their walls: “hempcrete,” a concrete-like blend made by mixing hemp hurd — the woody core of the cannabis plant — with water and lime. Despite the name, the material isn’t a direct substitute for concrete. But as an insulating material within walls, it holds the potential to transform the homes where we reside in ways that are healthier for people and the planet alike.

The building industry takes a staggering toll on the environment. It’s not just concrete, which is depleting the world’s sand, making cities more flood prone, and spewing a huge amount of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere along the way. There’s also the insulation in our walls, the vinyl coating our floors, and the laminates in our countertops, most of which are derived from fossil fuels and have a sizable carbon footprint. From the foundations to the roof, today’s buildings are part and parcel of our extractive economy.

And that’s just the construction. Factor in the energy used to power and heat them, and buildings are responsible for nearly 40 percent of global carbon emissions, according to the U.N.

John Washington, a Buffalo-based organizer for the Homes Guarantee campaign, says it’s critical that climate mitigation efforts address both sides of this equation.

Sustainability is “not just saying we want homes that have solar panels and that require less fossil fuel in the heating system,” he said. “What about the fossil fuel, chemical, and plastics production in the process of building and rehabilitating the home?”

Conventional building materials pollute our indoor air, too: many of them release volatile organic compounds (VOCs) like formaldehyde, a known carcinogen, and other harmful chemicals. That’s without counting materials like lead and asbestos, which continue to plague public health even decades after they were banned, especially in communities of color.

“In Buffalo and in many Rust Belt cities,” Washington said, “we have folks whose homes literally are killing them.” The effort to retrofit those homes as cheaply and efficiently as possible usually leads contractors back to petrochemicals.

Enter hempcrete. The natural building material has gained a dedicated following among green builders, featuring in homes from Cape Town, South Africa, to Cambridgeshire, U.K. to Asheville, North Carolina. With the Biden team promising to retrofit and build millions of homes to fight the climate crisis, sustainable materials like hempcrete are poised for a much wider breakthrough in the U.S.

As construction scales up, the question is: can hemp be part of an affordable housing future — not just one for eco-conscious elites? Paris is determined to show that it can be.

Hempcrete’s core purpose is insulation, which is of course critical to reducing a building’s use of energy for heating and cooling. In pure insulation value for a given thickness, it’s slightly less effective than typical, plastic-based materials like fiberglass or foam board. Still, it has one distinct advantage.

Hempcrete acts like a “sponge,” said Benoît Savourat, a French farmer and the president since 1998 of the influential hemp growers’ cooperative La Chanvrière de l’Aube. (“Chanvre” means hemp in French, and l’Aube is the part of northeastern France where the cooperative is based.) It absorbs moisture from the surrounding air when it’s humid and releases it again when it’s too dry. That plays a crucial role in stabilizing the “felt temperature” of a room.

“When you’re in a humid environment, you need to heat it to 70 degrees or more,” said Savourat. “With hempcrete, you’re perfectly comfortable at 65.” (I translated Savourat’s comments from French and converted the temperatures from Celsius to Fahrenheit.)

Conversely, summer air doesn’t feel as sticky, making it tolerable without air conditioning. That means less energy use year-round, and could make a big difference as summer temperatures continue to rise.

Hemp’s real edge when it comes to fighting climate change, though, is in the carbon it absorbs throughout its life cycle. In a growing season of about eight weeks, an acre of the crop can sequester some 10 tons of CO2 — more than a typical acre of trees can absorb in a year.

Different parts of the plant can then go to a variety of uses. Historically, including in the United States, industrial hemp has mainly been grown for its strong outer fibers, which can be woven into textiles, pulped into paper, or even transformed into forms of plastic. That leaves the inner core, or hurd, which is the main ingredient of hempcrete. Combine the hurd with lime, a powder derived from limestone which acts as a binder, and you get the sustainable building material.

Once blended together, hemp and lime continue to absorb carbon, offsetting emissions from other construction materials. (Because hempcrete is not a structural material, materials like wood, steel, or concrete are still needed to provide foundations and a frame.) Altogether, analysis by the Healthy Materials Lab at Parsons School of Design has found that building a wall with hempcrete generates roughly three times fewer carbon emissions than building a wall with conventional methods. The French engineering firm LM Ingénieurs found a similar figure when evaluating buildings over a 60-year lifecycle.

Gregory Ferembach is 36 and lives with his wife, two children, and cat about 10 minutes from the bustling République square, in one of Paris’s trendiest neighborhoods. Their six-story building, completed in 2017, was built to the highest standards of green design, including its hempcrete interior. Out front, its smooth stone facade blends in seamlessly with its neighbors, constructed in Paris’ iconic Haussmann style.

Yet Ferembach and his family pay about $1,600 per month for their three-bedroom apartment — half the market rate. Many of their neighbors pay less, based on their incomes. That’s because their building belongs to Paris’s public or “social” housing, expanded significantly under Mayor Anne Hidalgo. Ferembach and his wife freelance in advertising and real estate, respectively, which puts them on the upper end of the income threshold for social housing. Still, for the family of four, the reduced rent means the difference between staying in Paris and fleeing to the suburbs. The low heating bills help, too.

Across the Paris region, social housing serves as an “engine” for more sustainable design and supply chains, says Isabelle Quet Hamon, director of sustainable development at Paris Habitat, the city’s main social housing agency. That role, she says, is inextricable from the agency’s core mission of providing high-quality homes for all.

Paris Habitat inaugurated the city’s first hempcrete development in 2012. The five-story building on Rue Bourgon, in the city’s 13th arrondissement or district, is tiny by social housing standards, with just eight apartments. But even today, it remains an outlier in the single-family-dominated world of hemp construction. Paris has meanwhile added at least three more hempcrete buildings, totaling about 40 subsidized units, and more are in the works. An eight-story, 15-unit building is underway in the ritzy 16th arrondissement, while another was just completed in the neighboring suburb of Boulogne-Billancourt.

Hemp and other natural materials still represent a small fraction of overall construction in Paris, including social housing. But Quet Hamon says they are becoming more mainstream in renovations, and Paris Habitat plans to use such materials in at least half of the thousands of social housing units that will need upgrades in the coming years.

The transition has presented its share of challenges. Quet Hamon says because most natural materials don’t insulate quite as efficiently as their petrochemical counterparts, a wall retrofitted with them usually needs to be a little thicker — something Paris Habitat seeks to avoid as much as possible in a city where every inch of floor space is precious.

There’s also the cost. Even in France, which has the most advanced hempcrete industry in the world, the supply chain still relies on a handful of key producers, and installation requires specially trained contractors. These growing pains are reflected in the cost: architect Richard Thomas of the Paris firm North by Northwest estimates that, on average, hempcrete construction adds about 20 percent to the cost of a new building. Per square foot of wall, he says, the costs can be as much as double those of conventional materials.

But Thomas is quick to add that those costs can be offset elsewhere. For example, because hempcrete is so lightweight, it allows for buildings with relatively modest foundations, saving on concrete below ground.

Quet Hamon notes that the larger up-front investment also saves in maintenance. A robust building “envelope” — the walls and lining that shield its interior from the elements — reduces the need for ventilation and other systems that require more upkeep, Quet Hamon said.

Alison Mears, director of the Healthy Materials Lab, says hempcrete’s “breathability” makes it particularly appealing in this respect. Jonsara Ruth, the lab’s co-founder and design director, says hempcrete is also highly resistant to fire, pests, and mold, both because of the way it regulates humidity and because the lime in it sets “like stone.” Mears notes this reduces the need for flame retardants, which are “incredibly toxic.”

Those properties translate into health benefits, which Quet Hamon argues should also be factored in when considering the extra costs of building a home with hempcrete.

Advocates agree that the industry still has a long way to go before hempcrete can go mainstream. That’s even more true in the U.S., where industrial hemp cultivation has really only been legal since 2018, when the Farm Bill lifted an 80-year ban. Hemp production has skyrocketed since then, but most of it has been used for cannabidiol, or CBD, a compound added to food, drinks, and supplements for its health benefits. And that boom has already gone bust as the initial glut of hemp supply far exceeded demand for CBD.

Building a healthy market for hempcrete will require everything from testing seed varieties to updating building codes to training contractors. Jacob Waddell, president of the U.S. Hemp Building Association, said he would love to see federal subsidies for hemp growers, although he still sees that as a distant prospect.

Meanwhile, a range of U.S. hempcrete enthusiasts are testing ways to make the material more accessible and affordable. Chief among them is developing standardized blocks or panels, which most experts agree could be an important step in bringing costs down. Companies like IsoHemp in Belgium are already producing such blocks, which have been used to build and renovate everything from farmhouses to schools. The Healthy Materials Lab is working with partners to develop U.S.-made analogs, and Ruth is confident that with lessons learned from Europe, they can “leapfrog” some of the process.

Ruth and Mears say hempcrete could lend itself particularly well to restoring abandoned wood-frame houses in places like the Rust Belt.

“We would love to see the development of a whole new industry in this area, where those abandoned houses are renovated and are affordable for local residents,” Mears said. She and Ruth envision local farmers adding hemp to their crop rotations, old factories being repurposed to process it, skilled trades like masonry being revived, and construction workers being trained to transform thousands of homes.

For John Washington, the Buffalo-based organizer at Homes Guarantee, building a hempcrete economy in this way could “anchor” wider efforts to repair historical wrongs.

“If we can really create some diversity and democracy in who has access to benefit from these things, especially intentionally as we’re opening up hemp, I think that that can do a great deal to impact climate change and impact the sustainability of these systems,” he said.

That goes hand in hand with addressing perhaps the most fundamental obstacle to the hemp industry’s growth in the U.S.: the war on drugs, which is still putting hundreds of thousands of mostly Black and brown people behind bars for marijuana-related offenses each year. Even as states begin to lift prohibitions on growing and using cannabis in all its forms, the legacy of criminalization also continues to create headaches for industrial hemp, forcing producers to navigate a maze of legal and logistical hurdles.

Advocates like Washington say that as the respective “green economies” of cannabis and climate solutions take off, it’s crucial they be grounded in a commitment to racial justice. That would mean, he said, “actually centering and resourcing people who have had marijuana convictions, who come from communities that have been devastated by the way that marijuana has been used for mass incarceration” when it comes to economic opportunities related to hemp.

“Hemp is a real opportunity to flip all of these dynamics and make sure that the movements around housing, climate, and policing are actually landing in each neighborhood and really rebuilding the way that neighborhood economies work,” Washington added.

This article was originally published in Grist and appears here as part of the SoJo Exchange from the Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organization dedicated to rigorous reporting about responses to social problems.

Like what you’re reading? Get a browser notification whenever we post a new story. You’re signed-up for browser notifications of new stories. No longer want to be notified? Unsubscribe.

Colin Kinniburgh is a reporter at New York Focus, covering the state’s climate and environmental politics. Over a decade in media, he has worked in print, television, audio, and online news, and participated in fellowship programs at CUNY’s Graduate School of Journalism and the Metcalf Institute. His reporting has appeared in outlets including France 24, Grist, Dissent and The Nation.

Tags: climate changepublic housingparissustainability

×
Next City App Never Miss A StoryDownload our app ×
×

You've reached your monthly limit of three free stories.

This is not a paywall. Become a free or sustaining member to continue reading.

  • Read unlimited stories each month
  • Our email newsletter
  • Webinars and ebooks in one click
  • Our Solutions of the Year magazine
  • Support solutions journalism and preserve access to all readers who work to liberate cities

Join 1096 other sustainers such as:

  • Gabby at $5/Month
  • Abigail at $10/Month
  • Gloria at $5/Month

Already a member? Log in here. U.S. donations are tax-deductible minus the value of thank-you gifts. Questions? Learn more about our membership options.

or pay by credit card:

All members are automatically signed-up to our email newsletter. You can unsubscribe with one-click at any time.

  • Donate $20 or $5/Month

    20th Anniversary Solutions of the Year magazine

has donated ! Thank you 🎉
Donate
×