spring.net — live bbs — text/plain
The SpringHome › topic 2

straw homes

topic 2 · 11 responses
~terry Sun, Jan 5, 1997 (19:24) seed
Building a straw bale house (from Roger Karraker): ------- If you'd prefer a digest version of the Straw Bale Mailing List rather than receiving each message individually (or vice-versa), send an e-mail message to mailto://Majordomo@crest.org with this format of commands in the body of the message: unsubscribe strawbale subscribe strawbale-digest (Or the other way 'round, if that's what you're after.) I use digest, it runs abour 30K-60K a day in a single file. Otherwise you get 10-20 messages a day Here are a few of the best Web sites. The first one links to dozens of others. There are at least a few people posting to the list from the Austin area. In fact, I think there was a recent strawbale conference there. http://www.strawhomes.com/resources/internet.html http://www.whidbey.com/lighthook/sb.htm http://www.snowcrest.net/smb/
~terry Wed, Feb 17, 1999 (11:54) #1
What's the difference between a straw bale house and a cob house? Straw-bale is perfect for keeping uniform temperatures. Essentially it's pretty simple a funciton of very thick walls (resistance to heat transfer) and substantial internal thermal mass to store warmth or "coolth". The thermal mass creates what's known as "the flywheel effect," i.e., slow changes in temperature. Terry, I don't know specifics on cob walls, but I suppose they're made from corncobs packed together in some form or other. Our place is made of bales made from rice-straw. The bales are 4 feet by 2 feet, 15 inches high. - Roger Karraker No, cob is as Becky Bee author of The Cob Builders Handbook says, "a house made out of mud...Cob is sand in effect 'mortared' toegther with clay and strengthened with straw..." and you sculpt with it. She uses different size pieces of loose straw. There are several articles in The New Settler Interview on building with cob. - lmonte There's a nice cob house in Occidental at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center. - Marge Wright And finally, there's Laura De La Garza's cob house, and I've invited her to comment.
~stacey Mon, Mar 1, 1999 (14:29) #2
There is a man who works here (where I work) who is in the finishing stages of building his straw house. He and his wife are going to retire there. Amazing structure from pictures and stories... he has wanted to do this for over 15 years!
~terry Mon, Mar 1, 1999 (14:47) #3
It's a great idea. Do you know the difference between a cob house and a straw house?
~stacey Mon, Mar 1, 1999 (14:51) #4
nothing more than I've read from inside this topic...
~terry Tue, Mar 2, 1999 (01:59) #5
I'm still trying to figure it out also, I'd like to visit Laura de La Garza's place out on the Blanco River and check out a cob house first hand. Maybe later in the season, when swimmin' season starts.
~autumn Tue, Mar 2, 1999 (16:47) #6
Yeah, you definitely need another house to manage, Terry.
~stacey Tue, Mar 2, 1999 (16:49) #7
cob houses are like adobe... that was the extent of my knowledge gleened from talking with Bill (owner/builder of the straw bale home) today.
~terry Tue, Mar 2, 1999 (21:15) #8
I wonder if there are multistory straw houses?
~stacey Wed, Mar 3, 1999 (11:08) #9
yikes... dunno
~wolf Mon, May 31, 1999 (11:35) #10
how do they keep them (straw) from burning up? and can you keep varmin out?
~stacey Wed, Jun 2, 1999 (18:29) #11
it's all stuccoed
log in or sign up to reply to this thread.