Wednesday, June 30, 2010

~~Building With Cob~~


I found this article online today, it's from Eco Online. I'm posting this because we still get lots of questions from family and friends about what we are building, will it hold up, is it made from corn (no) etc. etc. This should help answer a few of those questions. A few of the names mentioned in the article (Ianto and Linda) is who we've taken cob courses from at The Cob Cottage Co. in oregon. They are very well known in the cob world and are published authors of a few different books on cob.

Here's the article:
Cob builders use their hands and feet to form lumps of earth mixed with clay, straw and sand. It is a sensory and aesthetic experience similar to sculpting with clay. Cob is very easy to learn and inexpensive to build.
Because there are no forms, ramming, cement or rectilinear bricks, cob lends itself to organic shapes: curved walls, arches and vaults. Earthen houses are cool in summer and warm in winter.
Cob has been used for millennia, even in the harsh climates of southern England, where thousands of comfortable and picturesque homes have been continuously occupied for many centuries. In fact, earth homes, built in this free form manner, have existed around the world for thousands of years.
Welshman Ianto Evans and American Linda Smiley, of "Oregon Cob" fame, brought Cob to Australia in 1995, teaching a workshop in Caboolture. Linda McKee and Mal McKenna continued teaching Cob until 2000. Since then, Mal and his builder friend, Michael Leo, have succeeded in getting Council approval for a Cob building, which will be built in the near future. In the meantime, Alan Atkinson of Eco Homes and Gardens has formed a new partnership with Mal, who lives at Bellbunya Eco Conference Centre, to bring Cob building into the mainstream of new green housing approaches, beginning with an exciting series of Cob building workshops at Bellbunya.
Because earth is non-toxic and completely recyclable, many people searching for a more eco-friendly lifestyle are bound to embrace this living, breathing choice of home. Further, Cob is ideal for owner-builders, who can have friends help out with this easily learned form. The cob lump goes straight from the mixing spot to the wall, where it is knitted in using feet, hands and blunt sticks to form one mass -- a hand sculpted home. The lumps are made to your size, making it easy for children to be involved. It is a very safe work site; there are no power tools, as we encourage the use of hand tools and as little timber as possible.
No, Cob is not a fast process: it can be made timeless, though, when we get that right mix of soul and mind. You might as well take your time slowly building your home which, if tended to lovingly over the years, will stand proudly for years to come.

1 comment:

Eat To Live said...

Very interesting. I can't wait to see it when it is finished.

I have an APRON GIVEAWAY on my blog. Hope you can enter.

Terry
http://myjourneywithcandida.blogspot.com/