Rethink Your Life! Finance, health, lifestyle, environment, philosophy |
The Work of Art and The Art of Work Kiko Denzer on Art |
|
|
[Cob] building with shipping containers, straw bales, and cobRay Cirino cobanation at yahoo.comFri Jun 27 00:03:50 CDT 2008
Dear All, Should a human be put into another square box of metal that was designed to ship things. Use it for storage. I would much rather live in this house. http://people.tribe.net/raycirino/photos/02a91d9f-c1c2-4ec8-b305-e1931b260a3f http://people.tribe.net/raycirino/photos We have a right to build what we want, not what someone says is good. Ray --- On Thu, 6/26/08, Marlin Nissen <marlin_nissen at yahoo.com> wrote: From: Marlin Nissen <marlin_nissen at yahoo.com> Subject: Re: [Cob] building with shipping containers, straw bales, and cob To: coblist at deatech.com Date: Thursday, June 26, 2008, 5:04 PM I agree, using shipping containers for a frame seems relevant to me and those (experts of course believe they own a subject) could use discretion when claiming "this is the most off topic, weird etc. etc." when there's been many MORE off topic discussions about politics etc....... I think crates covered with Cob/Earth Plaster is very relevant. I think the subject is interesting and would love to see a combo recycled and earthen building. I've planned to use waxed cardboard bales and Cob together, yet I know this not PURIST Cob building - tisk tisk...................... ???what about Milk Crates wired together & packed/stuffed with straw and covered with Cob? How bout that for a topic? BTW I like the conical roof as this is a tough subject to deal with and also doing work without cover is difficult at least around the midwest,,,it'd be nice to have cover before cobbing! Marlin --- On Thu, 6/26/08, Elizabeth Evans <vesperlight at gmail.com> wrote: From: Elizabeth Evans <vesperlight at gmail.com> Subject: Re: [Cob] building with shipping containers, straw bales, and cob To: coblist at deatech.com, "Selvoy Fillerup" <selvoy at hotmail.com> Date: Thursday, June 26, 2008, 2:37 PM I know I'm usually just a lurker -- but if the list can discuss straw-bale/cob hybrids, mobile-home/cob hybrids, superadobe/cob hybrids, cordwood/cob hybrids, and conventional/cob hybrids -- all of which I have seen discussed here -- I don't see why we can't discuss shipping container/cob hybrids. That said -- if I can ever afford to stop lurking and start building, I will buy the top books on both cob and superadobe (my top 2 choices), read them cover to cover, make phone calls, ask questions, take workshops in the method I choose, and build some small trial projects to get a feel for it. This is a reasonable investment to make in the safety and durability of the roof over my head (hopefully, the roof that will last the rest of my life and my son's life and my grandchildren's lives). On the subject of high ceilings, take a look at http://fishrock.com/conics/default.html. This designer suggests that you could build one of his roofs, then build up cob walls to meet them, with shelter while you work. I have also looked at the info available on shipping container building and am intrigued by it. Shipping containers can be covered inside and out with conventional siding and sheetrock or with more natural alternatives or recycled matariels-- they don't have to look like corrugated steel. You can get high ceilings by stacking them (lots of possible configurations) and cutting out the metal between them... For the list: Used shipping containers are cheap (around $2000 last time I did a search) because our trade deficit means that shipping containers used to ship goods to the U.S. are piling up in railyards. Recycled shipping containers can be installed on concrete piers with a minumum use of concrete and are actually another ingenious solution for low-cost housing (not as cool, wonderful and ingenious as cob of course...) How "green" they really are depends on all of the other decisions that going into how they are used. And you obviously want clean containers with no nasty residues. I can't find a link, but somewhere there's a page showing a shipping container that was used to build a minimum impact research base for studying a jungle site. They put it on piers (no excavation) and set up solar panels. If you want to play with designs, try mock-ups in cardboard for a hand-on 3-D trial, or download SketchUp from Google and invest a few hours in the tutorials....you can download shipping container sketches (and many other standard building features such as windows and sliding doors) from their library...design a landscape...and stack them up.... It occurs to me that if you can incorporate it aesthetically into your design, you could use a container for temporary shelter while you build a cob house, and use it for a garage/workshop/garden shed when the home is complete. Just my 2 cents. Elizabeth _______________________________________________ Coblist mailing list Coblist at deatech.com http://www.deatech.com/mailman/listinfo/coblist
|