7:18
Natural alternative building
Natural alternative building
Go to www.kleiwerks.org for a wealth of free natural building photos and resources. Why is exploring natural building alternatives so important? 95% of our original forests have been destroyed. Current building construction accounts for... # 40% of the world's energy usage # 40% of the debris dumped in landfills # 18% of the world's fresh water usage And results in 30 years of debt for the average home owner. This video is about the reintroduction and refining of traditional common sense, on site building practices across the globe. Kleiworks at http has trained locals in the art of natural building in Thailand, Argentina, the United States of America, Laos, China, Burma, India, Chile, Peru, Costa Rica, Australia, Brazil and England. Even if you're not building a home you can help revive sensible, sustainable, ecologically friendly building by making a tax deductable donation to the kleiworks training fund at www.kleiwerks.org
6:38
How to choose a natural building material (ie cob or straw or a mix)
How to choose a natural building material (ie cob or straw or a mix)
You may find cob cottages particularly cute, but taste isn't reason enough to choose one natural building material over another. Like more manufactured products, different earth materials all have different uses: straw bale is a great insulator, cob is a nice thermal sink as well as one of the easiest materials to sculpt if you're looking for lots of curves in your structure. Since different parts of the building need to do different tasks, even in the same building you might choose straw bale for one wall and cob for another. Natural building expert Michael G. Smith shows us some of the uses for straw bale, cob, slip straw and clay wattle (a variation on wattle and daub) in the homes and buildings of Boonville, California's Emerald Earth Sanctuary. Original content here: faircompanies.com
2:13
Natural building myths: tiny homes and green roofs
Natural building myths: tiny homes and green roofs
The most attention-getting natural homes are often small and topped with a turf roof. Here, natural building expert Michael G. Smith shows us a 3000-sq-ft earth building and dispels the myths that all natural building needs to be tiny and covered with an green roof.
3:16
Natural buildings don't melt
Natural buildings don't melt
With all the videos I've done on earth buildings (like the tiny cob cottage in North Carolina or themudbrick home in Melbourne, Australia) one of the most common questions I've gotten is what happens if it rains? So I asked natural building expert Michael G. Smith to address just this issue. Original content here: faircompanies.com
8:34
Natural Building How-To: Making Earthen Plaster (PART 1)
Natural Building How-To: Making Earthen Plaster (PART 1)
Lately, there's been a lot of building work going on around Dancing Rabbit. So for this episode of Dancing Rabbit TV, we're taking the opportunity to provide a "how-to" natural building lesson, an in-depth video about earthen plastering techniques and application. Tamar guides us through every step of the way, showing how easy it is to make natural plaster from just a few simple ingredients, and both making and mixing the plaster, and then applying it to a natural home wall. (Watch PART 2 of this video here: www.youtube.com
7:18
A return to natural building: why we will all build with straw & clay (again)
A return to natural building: why we will all build with straw & clay (again)
Until relatively recently we all built our homes from local, unprocessed materials (ie stone, wood, straw, earth). Not only do modern buildings impose a burden on the environment- clearcutting, mining, manufacturing runoff into the air and water, etc- but many of the manufactured materials are making us sick. "Even the mainstream press carries frequent stories of cancers and respiratory problems linked to formaldehyde-based glues, plastics, paints, asbestos, and fiberglass, to name a few favorite culprits," explains Michael G. Smith in the book "The Art of Natural Building". Smith gave us a tour around his current home, the Emerald Earth Sanctuary (an intentional community in Mendocino, California), and showed us the many examples of very modern-looking earth structures (including cob, straw bale, clay wattle and slip straw). Original story here: faircompanies.com * This is one in a long series of videos with Smith regarding natural building.
11:01
DRTV: Natural Building Home Tour: Larkspur
DRTV: Natural Building Home Tour: Larkspur
In the second episode of DRTV, we take a look at Larkspur, home of Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage members Tony and Alyssa. In their tour, the duo includes information and tips about their natural home design and building process. Larkspur features local and sustainable building materials, including reclaimed lumber, light clay straw insulation, and earthen plaster, and its power is provided by renewable energy, including solar panels and a wind tower. drtv.dancingrabbit.org
3:22
Cob Guest House in Seattle - Natural building with Clay - Tamacun
Cob Guest House in Seattle - Natural building with Clay - Tamacun
It took me 3 yrs to build this tiny retreat, but not full time. We finished so late in the season that the cob had trouble drying and we actually had to watch for mold on the interior wood that first winter.The pics are pretty much in sequential order. The summer we started making mud, we got serious, and I'm sure I put in 400+ hrs, not including help from friends and my patient partner, Roy. At least the materials were cheap, and mostly recycled. Visitors have crafted some of their own special skills into making this humble little house unique. It has a composting toilet system and solar panels, but you can pick up wifi!
1:39
Natural building: a water-resistant earthen floor
Natural building: a water-resistant earthen floor
Natural building expert Michael G. Smith from the Emerald Earth Institute shows us the first layer of an earthen floor (clay soil, sand, chopped straw and road base, or crushed rock): just one layer of the 3 layers they eventually use. He also shows us a finished floor that has been treated with 4 to 6 coats of linseed oil and is water resistant and completely mop friendly.
5:06
natural building@ecoart farm
natural building@ecoart farm
permaculture.gr Natural building at ecoart farm, April 2010 Course instructor Mark Krawzyc Designer: Stamatina Palmou Facilitator: Alex Christakis Sideshow: Photography : Stamatina Palmou / Mark Krawzyck Music : Vangelis Papathanasiou
4:41
Natural building codes: some for straw bale and adobe, little for cob
Natural building codes: some for straw bale and adobe, little for cob
There are no building codes for most types of natural building. The one material that does have a fair amount of testing and data is straw bale, thanks to California rice growers. "So the rice growers had a very, very strong economic incentive to support the development of straw bale building so they'd have a market for their straw bales which is great," explains natural building expert Michael G. Smith, "but in the absence of that, there's nobody trying to sell dirt, there's no industry out there pushing the sale of clay soil or stones or natural sticks or wood chips. So the question becomes who's going to get behind and really fund the very expensive research that needs to happen to make these things more accessible to people wanting to build to code." Original story here: faircompanies.com
2:49
Natural building Cob teaser Music by Michael Franti
Natural building Cob teaser Music by Michael Franti
Making cob Music by Michael Franti @ www.spearheadvibrations.com
4:05
Natural Building How-To: Making Earthen Plaster (PART 2)
Natural Building How-To: Making Earthen Plaster (PART 2)
(This is a continuation from PART 1: www.youtube.com Lately, there's been a lot of building work going on around Dancing Rabbit. So for this episode of Dancing Rabbit TV, we're taking the opportunity to provide a "how-to" natural building lesson, an in-depth video about earthen plastering techniques and application. Tamar guides us through every step of the way, showing how easy it is to make natural plaster from just a few simple ingredients, and both making and mixing the plaster, and then applying it to a natural home wall.
8:47
NATURAL BUILDING SLIDESHOW - COB
NATURAL BUILDING SLIDESHOW - COB
NATURAL BUILDING SLIDESHOW pictures of us building homes, earth ovens, garden walls, and benches with cob...cob is sand, clay, water and straw mixed together...and a "dirt cheap" way to build...
2:48
Natural Building Intensive time lapse photos
Natural Building Intensive time lapse photos
This video shows time lapse images of Yestermorrow's Natural Building Intensive 2008 project at the Center for Whole Communities in Fayston, Vermont. More information available at www.yestermorrow.org.
6:09
re-HOME Sustainable Homes and Natural Building Meetup Group, Mud Plaster Party
re-HOME Sustainable Homes and Natural Building Meetup Group, Mud Plaster Party
This is one of the good things about living in Southern AZ. We have access to some really wonderful people doing sustainable building and willing to teach others about it. Marcia Gibbons was our hostess and she taught us how to create a mud plaster on the interior and exterior of walls, amongst other things. Anyone interested in green homes, sustainability, green living, and natural building, this video is worth the few minutes.
1:22
Natural Building: 6 weeks in 60 seconds
Natural Building: 6 weeks in 60 seconds
Natural Building Intensive with Living Craft Project (livingcraft.org); Built a house foundation to finish in Quail Springs, CA. Straw bale, cob, straw clay, earthen plaster, earthen floor. Video set to Gnarles Barkley "Crazy"
10:00
Humanure Toilets at Natural Building Conferences
Humanure Toilets at Natural Building Conferences
From HumanureHandbook.com: This 10 minute video shows humanure toilet systems used at two natural building conferences, one in Texas in 2007 and one in New York in 2008.