Sustainable Building Sourcebook
Chapter: Materials
 
Insulated Concrete Forms
 
CSI Numbers: 04220 Concrete Masonry Units
 
Introduction:
 

Insulated Concrete Forms (ICFs) are a family of exterior wall systems that provide the strength of structural concrete walls with the thermal performance of integral insulation and high thermal mass.

Also see the Green Building Factsheets for introductions to this and other green building topics.

 
At-A-Glance Notes:
 
Technology:
Wall-forms are standard technology.
 
Suppliers:
All systems have local suppliers or representatives and are readily available.
 
Cost:
Insulated wall form products have a higher initial material cost than 2x4 construction but provide a superior product. Labor costs can be reduced because these products can be installed by less skilled crews and are less time consuming.
 
Public Acceptance:
Wall form products are gaining in popularity in the Austin market. Production builders are experimenting with these products. If a major production builder adopts one of these systems, prices could become competitive with 2x4 framing.
 
Regulatory:
Structures have been built in Austin using all of these systems. Engineered plans may be required for permitting.
 
Considerations:
 

ICFs can be divided into three categories: fiber-cement block systems, plank or panel wall forms, and precast Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (AAC). All of these systems offer good thermal performance due to their integral insulation and high mass. They also provide excellent acoustical insulation and a minimum two-hour fire rating. Pests such as termites may not eat any of these products but they will burrow into the foam-based panel and plank forms and travel to areas like window and doorjambs or bucks and roof framing where wood is available as a food source. Care should be taken to raise foam panels at least one foot above grade to prevent this infestation.

Fiber-cement block systems are systems that use individual blocks or large panels that use some elements common to block systems or CMUs (Concrete Masonry Units). These common elements are an exterior shell made of an insulating material, and interior and end webs that tie the shells together.

Fiber-cement block systems are manufactured using a small amount of concrete, usually about 10 percent, as the structural element and a high percentage of either mineralized wood fiber or expanded polystyrene pellets to provide insulating properties. One environmental advantage of these systems is that the wood fiber and the polystyrene can be, and usually are, recycled materials.

The fiber-cement block systems have a higher material cost than 2x4 framing, but some of this higher cost is offset by the use of less skilled labor to stack the block, place the structural steel, and pour the concrete fill. These units combine the traditional steps of framing, insulating and sheathing the wall into the process of placing the block and pouring the concrete. The most common and most efficient exterior finish for these systems is stucco, though siding, brick, or stone can also be easily used. The interiors can be plastered or hung with drywall. These block systems are usually impervious to termites because the wood has been mineralized to make it unattractive as a food source and where foam is used, it is in units too small for termites to burrow into.

Plank or panel forms are large sheets or planks of polystyrene that are placed on the interior and exterior of the perimeter wall. The forms are held a constant distance apart and the individual elements tied together by plastic or steel ties. Structural steel and concrete are then placed in the form to complete the wall. Most of these systems have fastening surfaces embedded in the foam to allow attachment of drywall, siding, or other materials. These systems can be finished in the same way as 2x4 framing except that screws are used as fasteners rather than nails. Care should be taken to ensure that the exterior foam shell is at least one foot above grade to prevent termites from burrowing into the forms and traveling to wood sources.

Insulated Concrete Forms, Fig. 1

Various ICF wall configurations.

Insulated Concrete Forms, Fig. 2

Typical wall section diagram.

 

Insulated Concrete Forms, Fig. 3

Various ICF wall configurations and typical wall section diagram.

Precast autoclaved aerated concrete is available in the form of blocks, wall, floor and roof panels, stair treads, and as lentils. AAC block and panel systems offer numerous advantages over standard load bearing wall and floor systems. As an integrated structural system, often erected by a single trade, construction time can be reduced. Being one-fifth the weight of concrete, the system brings far less load to the foundation, offering the possibility of structural cost savings.

 
Guidelines:
 

Specification for wall forms

Conventional construction methods

Wall forms use

Use of these systems eliminates the need for conventional exterior wall framing.

Insulated Concrete Forms (ICFs)

Most systems stack like blocks and erect easily. Some are in rigid panels on interior and exterior walls connected by metal or plastic ties. Some manufacturers also use expanded polystyrene (EPS) pellets or shredded wood mixed with cement to create the block rather than pure EPS.

ICF blocks are typically stacked as exterior walls. Rebar is placed in the cores vertically and horizontally. The cores are poured full of concrete from the top. Manufacturers claim R-values of R-30 or greater when thermal mass is included.

Specify that the foam be protected from insects physically and possibly with a borate treatment in the foam. Insects will not eat the foam but may nest in it otherwise.

Urethane block wall-forms and extruded polystyrene sheets/panel products are also available. These contain CFCs/HCFCs.

Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (AAC) blocks

The blocks are composed of cement, sand, lime, and an aerating agent, which is baked in an autoclave. The result is a very lightweight, insulative, and strong cement block. Blocks are stacked as bricks and held together with a mortar. Interiors and exteriors can be finished in a variety of methods. Use of these systems eliminates the need for conventional exterior wall framing.

 
Resources:
 
Professional Assistance:

See "Structural Engineers" in Yellow Pages.

Components/Materials/Systems:

See "Contractor's Equipment and Supplies, Concrete Additives, Concrete Construction Forms & Accessories, Concrete Contractors, Concrete Equipment and Supplies, Concrete - Ready Mixed, Concrete Reinforcements," in Yellow Pages.

ACCO Aerated Concrete Systems, Inc.
3351 West Orange Blossom Trail
Apopka, FL 32712
(888) 901-2226
www.accoaac.com
Aerated autoclaved blocks and panels

Applied Concrete Technology Inc.
P.O. Box 4015
Arlington Heights, IL 60006-4015
(800) 228-6694
www.protecrete.com
Manufacturer of "Protecrete" earth-friendly concrete enhancement/protection products

Babb International, Inc.
660 Highlands Pkwy., Ste. A
Smyrna, GA 30082
(770) 308-1500
Fax: (770) 308-1515
www.hebel.com
Aerated autoclaved blocks and panels

E-Crete
6617 North Scottsdale Rd., Ste. 203
Scottsdale, AZ 85250
(480) 596-3819
www.e-crete.com
Aerated autoclaved blocks

Texas Contec Inc.
12087 Starcrest
San Antonio, TX 78247
(877) 9-CONTEC
(210) 402-3223
www.texascontec.com
Local retail: Material Products International
(512) 925-0059
Aerated autoclaved blocks and panels

Insulated Concrete Forms (ICFs)

Amazon Forms
19068 Marbach Lane
San Antonio, TX 78266
(866) 651-3322
info@amazongridwall.com
www.amazongridwall.com
Insulated concrete forms manufacturer

American ConForm Industries
1820 S. Santa Fe St.
Santa Ana, CA 92705
(800) CONFORM
www.smartblock.com
SmartBlock EPS wall-form

American Polysteel Forms Inc.
6808 Academy Parkway East NE
Building C-2
Albuquerque, NM 87109
(800) 977-3676
www.polysteel.com
"Polysteel" EPS block wall-form
Local: Joe Bailey, (512) 415-9460
PolySteel of Austin
www.masterbuilderhomes.com

Amvic Building Systems
(877) 470-9991
www.amvicsystem.com
EPS block wall form
Local: Mike Pilley Enterprises Inc
P.O.Box 594
Marble Falls, TX 78654
(830) 693-0391, (830) 693-5565
tlp@281.com

Arxx Building Products
800 Division St.
Cobourg ON K9A 5V2
(800) 293-3210
www.arxxbuild.com
"Arxx High Performance Wall System" (formerly BlueMaxx)

Austin Insulating Concrete Forms Inc.
P.O. Box 91023
Austin, TX 78709
(512) 288-4334
www.austinicf.com
Owens-Corning "PinkFormXtra" & "LiteForm"

Eco-Block, LLC
P.O. Box 14814
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33302
(800) 595-0820
www.eco-block.com
Local Distributor: Capitol Aggregates
1001 Ed Bluestein Blvd.
(512) 385-5565
r.taggart@eco-block.com

Emega Technologies
5724 Old Logan Rd.
Lancaster, OH 43130
Don Duffey
(614) 419-4563
www.emegabuild.com
Developer of a portable, soy-based ICF manufacturing system

FutureStone
4055 International Plaza, Suite 500
Fort Worth, TX 76109
(817) 377-9215
Fax: (817) 377-9219
www.futurestone.com
randy.mcguffee@futurestone.com
Exclusive Texas distributor of NUDURA insulating concrete forms

GreenBlock WorldWide Corp.
P.O. Box 749
Woodland Park, CO 80866
(800) 216-1820
www.greenblock.com

I.C.E. Block Building Systems
P O Box 3089
Odessa, TX 78760
(800) ICE-BLOC
www.oikos.com/iceblock
"ICE Block" EPS block wall-form
Local: Sumpter Services, (512) 847-1411

Insulform Building Systems Inc.
1001 E. Highway 20
Lockhart, TX 78644
(512) 376-9955
EPS block wall-form

Lite-Form, Inc.
1210 Steuben St., P. O. Box 774
Sioux City, IA 51102-0774
(800) 551-3313
www.liteform.com
"Fold-Form" panel wall-form

NUDURA Corporation
27 Hooper Road, Unit 10
Barrie, Ontario, Canada L4N 9S3
Keven Rector
(866) 468-6299
keven@nudura.com
www.nudura.com

Poly-Form International
722 West Euless Blvd.
Euless, TX 76040
(817) 283-8916
EPS panel wall-form

Premere Insulating Concrete Forms
1413 North A Ave.
Sioux Falls, SD 57104
(800) 455-3676
www.premereforms.com
"Premere" EPS panel wall-form

QUAD-LOCK Building Systems
7398 132nd St.
Surrey, BC Canada V3W 4M7
(888) 711-5625
www.quadlock.com
EPS panel wall-form
Local: Ian Giesler, (254) 546-0202

Reddi-Form, Inc.
P.O. Box 165
Oakland, NJ 07436
(800) 334-4303
www.reddi-form.com
"Reddi-Form" EPS block wall-form
Local: Michael Beck, (512) 259-8836

Reward Wall Systems
4115 South 87th St.
Omaha, NE 68127-1601
(800) 468-6344
www.rewardwalls.com
"3-10" EPS wall-forms
Local rep: Roger Kriesel, (817) 614-9365
r.kriesel@ticnet.com

Royal Building Systems Ltd.
1 Royal Gate Blvd.
Woodbridge, Ontario L4L 8Z7
(877) 747-WALL (9255)
www.rbsdirect.com
Extruded plastic ICF wall system

Therma Foam Inc.
2324 Franklin Dr.
Ft. Worth, TX 76106
(800) 333-3626
EPS foam manufacturer and supplier of "Diamond-Snap Form" ICF system

ThermoFormed Block Corp.
P.O. Box 2454
Ft. Collins, CO 80522-2454
(800) 821-0855
www.thermoformed.com
"ThermoFormed" EPS block wall-form

Recycled Concrete Masonry Units (CMUs)

Amazon Forms
19068 Marbach Lane
San Antonio, TX 78266
(866) 651-3322
info@amazongridwall.com
www.amazongridwall.com
Insulated concrete forms manufacturer
"Grid-Wall" hollow-core, recycled polystyrene and cement blocks

Cempo Forms Inc.
Pahrump, NV
(775) 727-6565
www.cempo.com
Hollow-core, recycled polystyrene and cement blocks

K-X Industries Faswall
P.O. Box 180
Windsor, SC 29856
(803) 642-9346
www.faswall.com
Recycled fiber-cement wall-form comes in standard CMU sizes

Perform Wall LLC
5776 North Mesa
El Paso, TX 79901
(800) 761-8590
www.performwall.com
Hollow-core, recycled polystyrene and cement blocks
Local: Ron Smith, (512) 345-9272

RASTRA of the Americas, L.L.C.
Product Technology and Licensing
501 E. Plaza Circle, Ste. A+B
Litchfield Park, AZ 85340
(623) 935-3545
www.rastra.com
Hollow-core, recycled polystyrene and cement blocks
Local: Energy Wise Building Systems
(866) 472-2547
www.rastratexas.com

Tech Block International, LLC
1315 East Gibson Ln. B-2
Phoenix, AZ 85034
(602) 254-5414
www.techblock.com
Hollow-core, recycled polystyrene and cement blocks

General Assistance:

Autoclaved Aerated Concrete Products Association
7638 Nashville St.
Ringgold, GA 30736
(706) 965-4587
www.aacpa.org

Cement and Concrete Promotion Council of Texas
P. O. Box 937
Euless, TX 76039
(817) 540-4437
www.ccpc-texas.org

National Concrete Masonry Association
2302 Horse Pen Rd.
Herndon, VA 20171-3499
(703) 713-1900
www.ncma.org