Home > Tech Innovations > Green builder's house of straw blazes a trail in a rainy climate
   
   
   
     
       
Sun, 27 Sep 2009 19:56:00

Green builder's house of straw blazes a trail in a rainy climate

Randy L. Rasmussen
Lydia Doleman positions a bale of straw for measuring and fitting into the walls of the Southeast Portland home her company is building. The bales, once in place, will be highly compressed, covered with two layers of plaster – and create walls of exceptional thermal efficiency.
Andre Meunier, The Oregonian



From outside, the house appears to be a Craftsman. Clapboard siding. Decorative kneebraces under the eaves. A big porch.

But inside, the walls of this newly constructed Southeast Portland home once swayed in a Beaverton wheat field. They're made of straw – specifically, the big rectangular bales of straw found on any farm.

When done, the bales will be plastered over and unseen from even the inside.

But they'll be known to the happy occupant who, owing to straw's insulating capacities, will burn less fuel for heating or cooling. And hear less noise because of sound-deadening walls more than a foot thick. And breathe air free of the chemicals that can emanate from new and synthetic building materials.

Straw bale homes are not a new technology. They were constructed in tree-scarce Nebraska more than 100 years ago. Now they're not uncommon in the arid American Southwest.

But this is Multnomah County's first permitted straw bale home. And extra precaution will be taken to ensure water stays out – that the home perform as well in drenched Portland as it does in sunny climes, where straw bale structures withstand earthquake, fire, insect infestation.

Just 800 square feet of living space – the size of a comfortable one-bedroom apartment – it is designed for the eco-conscious dweller and the work of Lydia Doleman, a building contractor who has erected straw-bale structures in Clark County and southern Oregon, as well as a straw bale addition in Portland.

Now Doleman wants to bring the straw bale single family residence to the city. And she has done so adjacent to her own home, on the same double lot, just steps away.

"I want people to see this as a viable option and that they're not compromising aesthetics," she said.

The inside smelled like a cozy barn last week as Doleman and her friends stacked bales against the stud wood frame. The walls are not load-bearing, a precaution against accidental failure from moisture. But Doleman designed things to stay dry: 2 feet of eaves extend over the side of the house, sheathed in water-shedding Tyvek beneath the clapboard exterior.

Straw, a plentiful and inexpensive agricultural waste product, is not to be confused with hay, a food source for animals. Tubular in shape, it is tightly bound into a 30-to 40-pound bale measuring 18-by-16-by-44 inches. In this state it is a bad conductor of heat or cold and contains so little airspace that it resists fire.

Each bale is a large "brick" to build with, and Doleman will stack roughly 160 of them in this house. The she will run straps around them and use a machine to compress them against each other and the framed wall. The result is a continuous insulated wall whose studs, if they were in a conventional drywall, would insulate less by conducting heat and cold. The final walls will be more than a foot-and-a-half thick.

The straw is trimmed flat with a chainsaw-like cutter and then finished with cob plaster, which sticks to rough surfaces. Atop that will be a fine layer of lime plaster.

The City of Portland energy code requires walls to have a minimum insulation rating of R21. Doleman estimates her walls will be R30 or better – a significant measure beyond.

That sounds about right to David Cohan, market research & evaluation project manager for the Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance. He said straw bales have a long and wonderful history but that design and execution - as with anything - is key.

"If they don't get installed properly and sealed properly they will perform like garbage," he said. Insufficient compression will cause heat loss. And the intrusion of moisture will cause rot and mold.

But Doleman, who says her construction costs at $150 per square foot compare that of a stick-built new house, is confident her straw bale house will hold up. She teaches a course on alternative building design at Portland Community College. At the Rock Creek campus she built a one-room straw bale structure that will be used for the school's weather station.

She first learned how to build straw bale homes in Colorado at age 20. She moved to Portland seven years ago specifically do to natural building in an urban setting.

Energy efficiency drove her design of this house.

It faces south with plenty of windows for passive solar heat. The ceiling will be insulated with formaldehyde-free fiber glass. Water heated by rooftop solar panels will circulate through pipes in the floor to heat the house – avoiding the dust problems associated with forced hot air. And other photovoltaic cells will supplement the house electrical system.

Doleman thinks in the distant future.

"If you're looking at energy efficiency, you should think about it in 500-year chunks," she said. "How long could it last? It's our cultural responsibility."

Doleman, whose business goes by the name Flying Hammer Productions, said she will sell this house to a friend who is helping to build it – Matt Phillips. When he becomes her next-door neighbor, however, he will join others on Doleman's property, which features two occupied Craftsman homes as well as this new one – along with a shared garden and chickens.

"It's more about quality of life than quantity of space," said Phillips of the 800-square-foot structure.

Straw bale construction strikes a warm spot with city officials.

Valerie Garrett, the green building specialist with the city of Portland's Bureau of Planning and Sustainability, said she likes that straw bales area a renewable resource. She said it's exactly the kind of house she wants to put in the annual Build it Green! Homes Tour, which happened last week – an outcome that would surely delight Doleman.

Garrett said she loves that it's conventional on the outside and radical on the inside.

"If something . . . feels really really different, it's harder for someone to embrace it," she said. "It's very smart for her to do that."


Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/environment/index.ssf/2009/09/green_builders_house_of_straw.html
5 / 5 (1 Votes)


   
 

           
         
         
         
         
         
       
Your name:
Email (will not be published):
Subject:
Your Comment:


 
           
         

 

         
           
       

NASA sets sights on inflatable space...

No more floating in a tin can

Pentagon Dreams of Flying Car

Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research...

Panasonic Plans To Market Storage...

Home storage battery

A revolutionary invention hits the...

New intelligent bike wheel transforms...

A Breakthrough for Hydrogen Storage?

Technology from the Soviet space...

Children's invention to detect forest...

A network of solar powered CCTV cameras...

Scottish invention promises power...

Dr Markus Mueller, above, of the...

Betting on a Metal-Air Battery...

A government-funded start-up claims it...

Osmotic Power Plant Set To Open

Further climatic changes attributed to...

Fast-Charging Buses

High-power batteries could provide a...

Promising tests for MotionPower system...

The system is designed to be installed...

Sentient cities may answer back

The potential for technology to change...

Peugeot draws inspiration from the...

The Peugeot BB1, a cross between a...

Underground City Envisioned in Nevada

: In Frank Herbert’s famous1965 novel...

Longer-Running Electric-Car Batteries

Silicon-nanotube electrodes may enable...

Grants aim to rev alternative vehicle...

The lithium-ion battery would be the...

         
           
           

    Notice article's source. Non-commercial publication only. The published articles do not necessary represent FreeEnergy.ca point of view.
     
     

  AddThis Social Bookmark Button      
 

 

 

     
   

 

     
   

Solar Power
In Energy Innovation, Everything New Is Old Again In Energy Innovation,...

Most Alternative Fuel Technologies Have Roots in...

     
 

Wind Power
WindTamer brings turbines to campus WindTamer brings...

WindTamer Corp. recently began selling models of...

     
 

Hydro / Ocean
Pure water for Haiti, Afghanistan: Just Add Bacteria Pure water for Haiti,...

Researchers isolated a set of bacterium to do the...

     
   

Thermal Energy
Cool It and Warm It With a Chameleon Roof Cool It and Warm It With...

Cool in Summer Is Good, Cold in Winter Is Not

     
   

Waste
Harnessing waste heat to produce electricity Harnessing waste heat to...

A laptop generating a little too much waste heat

     
           
   

 

     
   

     
   

 

     
           
   

Hamilton: Albertan oil veteran pumping up 'nitrogen grid' Hamilton: Albertan oil...

The underground pipeline would eliminate the need...

High-Tech Energy "Oasis" to Bloom in the Desert? High-Tech Energy...

An illustration of the planned Sahara Forest...

Human-caused global warming easily overwhelms much-hyped "cold snap" Human-caused global...

Hottest January in UAH satellite record

Bees Always Have a Safe Landing Bees Always Have a Safe...

Find out why bees never crash land, and how their...

Who Needs the Grid? Who Needs the Grid?

A new fuel-cell technology promises to...

50 days to save the world? I might listen to the doomsayers if they weren't such ludicrous hypocrites 50 days to save the...

Prince Charles used the Queen's Flight to travel...

Conspiracy Theory Global Warming with Jesse Ventura Conspiracy Theory Global...

with Jesse Ventura

India's climate change proposals gets nod at Copenhagen summit India's climate change...

India is not here to renegotiate Kyoto agreement.

Automower Solar Hybrid: That's One Smart Lawn-Mowing Robot! Automower Solar Hybrid:...

$2,000 price tag may sound steep, the Automower...

The solar-powered school on stilts The solar-powered school...

The Forest School features up-cycled, recycled...

Oyster - the world's largest working hydro-electric wave energy device Oyster - the world's...

The Oyster wave energy device was launched this...

Simpler, cheaper, biodegradable plastic without using fossil fuels Simpler, cheaper,...

Biodegradable cups made from corn at Chubby's...

Mobile Water Purification Offers Hope To Disaster-Hit Regions Mobile Water...

A Safe and Natural Coagulant

CO2 Recycler Creates Fuel From Carbon Dioxide CO2 Recycler Creates...

A prototype of the machine, which was invented by...

Fat in Japan? You're breaking the law. Fat in Japan? You're...

As the health care debate rages in the US, Tokyo...

Energy Saving: Much Cheaper Than Building Power Plants! Energy Saving: Much...

Early in this century we had a nice life based on...

Ridgeblade® Wind Power Generator Wins Dutch Postcode Lottery Green Award Ridgeblade® Wind Power...

Wind Generator is not as simple as it looks

Commack students get $8,100 grant to make energy-saving device Commack students get...

We will invent a device that reduces standby...

Flapping Wind Turbine Inspired by Bumble Bee Wings Flapping Wind Turbine...

The xBEE has a19-foot wingspan and swoops in a...

WaveRoller Uses Swinging Door for Underwater Wave Energy WaveRoller Uses Swinging...

Wave energy

Harvesting Energy from Natural Motion Harvesting Energy from...

Magnets, Cantilever Capture Wide Range of...

Dirt-Powered Bacteria Batteries Dirt-Powered Bacteria...

The bacteria powered batteries works

5 big alt-energy letdowns: 5 big alt-energy...

Ideas that sounded good but...

The moon belongs to no one – yet The moon belongs to no...

The UN's Lunar Treaty is still unsigned by the...

Scientists hail a thoughtful future with ‘brain-to-brain communication’ Scientists hail a...

During the transmission two people are hooked up...

     
   

 

     
           
           
   

 

     
           
   

Free Energy  Videos

     
   

 

     

 


 

  Site  

      2004-2009 ©  FreeEnergy.ca

  Preview Chanel Preview Chanel   AddThis Feed Button
Powered by: PHPCow.com