@Flosstradamuss

I do this as a career in environmental construction. I’m a superintendent of a crew that installs these mainly at power plants in NC, Texas, and Kentucky.

@IrtiqaAhmad

Here in India, by the time they finish building a road, it starts breaking from the other end.

@p0pc0rn8parad0x

Someone finally found a better use for those ice cube bags.

@Colin_Lawlor_Audio

In Ireland we have a joke, how many builders does it take to dig a hole?
7!
1 to dig the hole, 6 to supervise.

@Criiies

They arent washing off dirt with the hose, theyre saturating the fabric with water. Cement needs water to set properly.

@monocyte2210

Man im living right now in Japan. A road eas being repaired here only took a day and a few workers with zero noise. A house is also being built here in our neighborhood. Zero noise. Pot holes and cracks in the sidewalks we walk on everyday just gets repaired miraculously. Lol. Japan infra tech is next level.

@zutaru-kun

Japan is literally the embodiment of efficiency in anything construction. They can literally remove and replace a bridge of a busy road. In a span of 4hrs

@kristinbrowne8756

My first encounter with Japanese road workers was a thing to behold. Not before or since then, have I EVER seen anyone using a bucket excavator at the kind of speed, accuracy and grace that that Japanese man did. It was poetry in motion.... brilliant!

@mchammer5592

Ingenuity not bureaucracy is the answer to so many problems.

@streamer_services

This is what happens when the money goes to the infrastructure instead of in politicians pockets.

@waqasahmad8015

Here in the UK they will have projects waiting around for years not being completed 
Even small pot holes are not given priority

@gerritscharke4109

Actually a German company called Huesker invented this method.

@JustAnNPC69

In the Philippines, that kind of project would have already cost 100 million dollars before the construction even started and by the time it is supposed to be completed you’ll find that the project has been canceled, no work was even started, and for some reason it now cost 300 million dollars.

@SteveSiegelin

We've been using these for military applications for years so I'm glad they're finally making it to the public more and more. As they say the public is 30 years behind the military. Every country's military has been using these and we even have inflatable concrete bunkers. You literally filled in with water and they become concrete hard.

@In-The-Wild-Outdoors

I lived in Okinawa, Japan for 3 years. I was absolutely amazed at how quickly they could construct things. Nearly all of the buildings were built from concrete, and nearly all of the utilities are underground. A typhoon would come and when it's gone everything is back to normal as soon as the rain stops. Here in the US, we build trailer parks in hurricane and flood zones ... i just don't get it.

@tntnminecraft

I'm so impressed with Japan. They are so amazing 😊😊😊

@Maomao304

In the Philippines 20years  to finish the bridge. In Philippines have many crocodile in our congress.

@LifeLore2024

Would you believe that in Burbank California city finished one week project in 2 years 😐

@EGGINFOOLS

Notice how clean the job site and the workers are? The Japanese work like that. Its amazing

@lantherpagdi

This is what citizens who really love and respect their country do