Affordability, low rate of CO2 emissions to the atmosphere, and small energy and water consumptions are some parameters that have to be taken into consideration when a product is designed. Using green building materials which must be renewable, local and abundant is a solution that contributes to achieve these important goals. In this context, several authors [1–5] have already proposed using different agricultural products such as bagasse, cereal, straw, corn stalk, corn cob, cotton stalks, kenaf, rice husks, rice, straw, sunflower hulls and stalks, banana stalks, coconut coir, bam- boo, durian peel, oil palm leaves among others for product process- ing such as particleboard, hardboard and fibre board, and focusing on their thermal insulation ability. Other authors have been study- ing the technical potential of using other types of residue such as newspaper [6], honeycomb [7] or polymeric wastes [8] in the processing of different building components.