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The Road to Regulatory Approval for Monolithic Pour NAAC Residential Structures
Published Online: September-October 2025
Pages: 85-94
Cite this article
↗ https://www.doi.org/10.59256/ijrtmr.20250505014Abstract
Growing pressure for houses that are both inexpensive and thermally efficient has pushed builders to experiment with materials like non-autoclaved aerated concrete (NAAC). The present case study follows the path that reinforced NAAC monolithic pour building systems take to securing regulatory sign-off, highlighting practical perks of casting on site, linking these pours to reinforced cement concrete (RCC) shear columns, and using small-scale, low-energy machines that local firms can manage. We track the length of the approval cycle, play out the cost trade-offs, lay bare any patent hurdles, and gauge how culture inside the industry slows wider use. Comparative data from testing under formal codes and informal setups, backed by practical financial estimates allow readers to see the promise and pitfalls in side-by-side form. Drawing on real project stories and comparing them to alternatives such as proprietary mixes or autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC) hybrids, we give contractors a step-by-step checklist for clearing compliance hurdles and moving NAAC products into a bigger market. The paper wraps up by weighing several fast-track routes that regulators might accept and points out which ones are most worth pursuing
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