I don't even see the need for the insulation, those forms are the expensive part, why not just conventional forming and a styro board put over the out side wall.
Isn't 8-10 inches of concrete a pretty good insulator? Maybe not since there is not alot of air space in there?
JB.
No, concrete is not particularly a good insulator. You are right about the concrete walls, though. Incorporating all that mass inside the the thermal envelope really stabilizes the interior temperature. I have built houses with concrete walls, styrofoam exterior insulation, and stucco siding over the styrofoam.
The cheapest way to build concrete walls is tilt-up. After pouring the slab, you cover it with plastic/plywood/release agent and form wall panels, box out window and door openings, tie in rebar with pick points (available commercially) and trowel it smooth. After it cures for 2-3 weeks, call a crane and stand it up. After you have the walls braced in position, you can either pour concrete pilasters at the joints to hold the building together, or you can cast steel Nelson studs into the corners and weld the joints together.
Alternatively, you can build concrete block walls. Pumice block is lighter and easier to build with, but doesn't have the thermal mass of heavyweight block. If you fill the cells of heavyweight block with concrete instead of just casting 4' x 4' bond beams, it will be almost as heavy as a cast concrete wall.
Setting up forms and casting concrete walls in place might be an option if your contractor does basements, which means he would have the crew and the forms.
The big down side of concrete walls is remodelling. When I replaced the windows in my 40-year-old stick framed house, I swapped the 2 x 2 kitchen sink window for a 6' bay window. That would have been a really expensive project in a concrete house.