Follow the self-made road: Incredible machine that lays out a carpet of bricks removing back-breaking hard work

Tiger-Stone can lay an incredible 400 metres of bricks a day

Device works using gravity-based system

Machine invented by Dutchman Henk van Kuijk







Building new roads can be an arduous and back-breaking task but thanks to a Dutch inventor, paving is now as simple as rolling out a carpet.

The amazing machine, named Tiger-Stone, can create an instant road wherever it travels, laying out bricks in formation to create perfect paving.

While the process may look magical, the secret behind the invention lies in a smartly-designed gravity-based system.

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Roll out the red pavement: The amazing Tiger-Stone machine can create an instant road wherever it travels

Simple: All a worker as to do is load the bricks into the machine in the desired pattern and gravity does the hard work

All a worker has to do is load the bricks by hand from a hopper into the Tiger-Stone in the desired patten.

From there gravity causes them to slide together, in a sheet of paving, onto the ground.

Brick roads have long been sought-after due to their attractiveness and durability but have become less common because of the labour-intensive work that goes into laying them, compared to other road surfaces such as concrete or asphalt.



However, with a Tiger-Stone workers are able to lay out 400 square metres of new road every day, using paving stones or bricks, compared to a single conventional paver on their hands and knees who would only be able to manage between 75 and 100 square metres.



Invention: The machine is the brainchild of Henk van Kuijk after he decided that kneeling to lay the bricks was too labour-intensive

Perfect paving: The device is fed loose bricks and lays them out onto the road as it slowly moves along

The machine is the brainchild of Henk van Kuijk, director of Dutch industrial company Vanku, who came up with his ground-breaking invention after deciding that squatting or kneeling down to place the bricks into the ground by hand was too much like hard work.



The device, which is as wide as a road and comes in four, five and six-metre widths, is fed loose bricks and lays them out onto the road as it slowly moves along.



The tread-tracked machine is electrically-powered, and has few moving parts, so noise and maintenance are kept to a minimum.



Once the bricks are in place, all a contractor has to do is go over the new road surface with a tamper, and the new highway is complete.

