Wednesday, January 8, 2014

The Farm

When I took my cob course in Tennessee this past October I noticed that an eco-village training center I had seen online was a close drive.  We had one day off in the middle of our course and a couple of my fellow eco-geek girls came along to check out The Farm with me.

Now, as much as I am interested in intentional community and eco-villages I get a little uncomfortable with words like commune and fascism. Though, realistically if you dive into philosophy of fascism versus what has actually played out it really is full on interesting concepts, and really, what was Marx actually saying? Fun debates.

 I want to live somewhere that people share because they choose to, where independence is valued, but community flows freely as choice.  Somewhere that people are valued and supported to realize their full creative potential by rising above the rat race and ensuring basic needs are met; these are the strengths I see in a sharing community. These are things I have gained from intentional communities in the past, though I have never been a member of a common purse. And while I'm on a role, I think that it is more important to realize my own equality and see what flows from there than to assume "the man" owes me equality.  I do, however, have respect for those that strive for equality and create communes that work and create conscious change, but have seen a lack of individual "ownership" transfer to a lack of respect for property, and sometimes scarcity. This is where my mind flows when I think of "communes".

 Stained glass dome at The Farm
 


I am intrigued by the story of The Farm as it morphed from commune, to intentional community to become self-supporting. Googling for more precise definitions I found this fun link to explore the definitions at planetfriendly.net

The eco-village training center at The Farm has a number of natural building projects going. I bumped into Jason "the green resourcerer" and he explained one of the eco-village projects to me that included fun building techniques I am interested in like straw slip, in-floor heating, more cob, bamboo, cordwood, and sawdust for insulation.  They were using cordwood to tie together two layers of cob with a space in the middle filled with sawdust for insulation.

Lion sculpted out of cob


The Farm has so much interesting history to share with anyone interested in different forms of sharing economies from co-housing to full blown communes. Now it has a midwifery center (that I did not get to visit yet) and the visitor's center is full of interesting resources . . . I just wanted to take pictures of the bookshelves and start googling subjects & authors . . .and a bookstore where I got one of my new favorite books Ecocities, rebuilding cities in balance with nature by Richard Register. 

 Slip straw I have been told works well as insulation

Cob sculpted fireplace 

Compost toilets & solar shower with Dawn

I would love to go back and experience more of their eco-village training center, natural building, vehicle conversion, and midwifery clinic.






Monday, January 6, 2014

heated Cob bench & thermal mass

I am really really starting to love the concept of thermal mass. The first time I heard about thermal mass was from Earthships. The tires and the berm around an Earthship provide thermal mass that acts as a temperature battery storing the heat or cold that you expose it to (integrating passive solar/south facing windows etc. to heat it up in cold times).

Deanne introduced me to a rocket stove DVD with Ernie & Erica Wisner and Paul Wheaton. It is expensive, but is a 4 DVD set with lots of information. In the DVD they discuss all sorts of good stuff relating to heat, fire, thermal mass, convection/conduction/radiation, and efficient heating. I went in with a friend to get the DVD and feel it was very worth it. I have started to think of heating homes differently.

I used to be one of those people who felt slightly frozen in the winter because heated air just didn't seem like enough to me. I felt I needed to soak in warm water or touch something warm to really soak in the heat (or gather my ambition for some kundalini yoga). Now I have learned that heating the air (convection) is likely the least efficient form of heating. Then we seal up houses to keep the warm air in and end up with stale allergen populated air.  No wonder everyone has allergies.

Heating thermal mass, which slowly releases the heat is heating by radiation and is very efficient. My body really likes this. Who doesn't like sitting on a warm bench in the winter . . . not counting menopausal women. Also, the heat is more regulated.  In the DVD someone mentions a house in Norway or Sweden that is heated with a masonry heater (using the concept of thermal mass & heating with radiation) and has free airflow to the outside just below the roof, staying plenty warm.  There are all sorts of ways to heat thermal mass from fire, to passive solar & glycol panels with in floor heating, and even in floor electrical heating mats (ease of installation & use but less efficient).   There are varying densities of thermal mass, from cement slab, even tile, to cob, and stone .  . . and so much more.

This all works up to: we are working on a heated cob bench, or two. The cob and stone help to store heat inside the house so it is not whisked out of the house if the door is opened or windows are not perfectly sealed.  The more thermal mass you have the more your desired temperature wants to stick to your living space.

One is in the entry room/inner almost-soon-to-be greenhouse.
The thermal mass is made of local limestone from a quarry and cob (also a nice sand & clay mix from a local quarry).
 Top picture is what we started with. We decided to take out the closet & table (doors are already off of the closet).
Everything is out. We tiled the walls. The bench goes in in a "U" shape.
Beginnings of a bench. We are having a cob mixing party tomorrow to bulk this up before sculpting and putting on a finish plaster coat. I'm not completely sure we will have enough materials to finish right now. The local quarries said that their stone is not accessible because it was frozen solid . . . our weather station said it was -17 degrees out this morning (without windchill factored in)! I hear this will be over soon though and I can access materials again.
The window between the bathroom and the entry room. I found these used glass floor tiles at the Habitat for Humanity Restore and knew they would fit the empty window frame perfectly; I just mortared them in. I thought about using bottle bricks but the frame is only about 1 1/2-2 in and the outsides slope. This was quick, easy, and fun. I like how it looks.

I will post a follow-up when the bench is finished!


tiling in retrofit

This past summer we had someone come to visit who is interested in intentional community. She stayed with us for a couple of weeks and we discussed community and our experiences with it and shared knowledge. While she was here Sarah Haas shared her tiling knowledge with us.

Sarah is a dancer who decided that she wanted to build her own home and performance structure that could go with her as she traveled the states.  When she told me she had interned with Dan Phillips I was excited to pick her brain because I had found his TED talk very inspiring. Dan Phillips gave a talk on building creatively with reclaimed materials in Texas.  While there Sarah gained a foundation of tiling knowledge and then expanded her knowledge to do some tiling professionally.

The first project we worked on was a small table. Sarah cut cement backer board and we used Versabond thin set mortar to set the prearranged (largely by Phoenix) scrap tile pieces in place. I know that when working with plasters and cement the right mix means lasting work. Knowing this is a good brand and how particular Sarah is about work that will last I will probably stick with this unless I hear otherwise.
The line of blue dragons' tears down the center Phoenix collected somewhere random.

Once the mortar had been given enough time to set (about a day or check label) we squished in a reddish grout. Sarah was a little nervous about staining the tile with a darker grout but Phoenix picked red and we decided to go with it. Once applied we sponged it off the tile within 2-3 minutes and then wiped any remaining grout off the tiles with a cleanish rag. There was very little staining. A couple of the white tiles had the tiniest amount of color change.  After grouting we used a water sealant, and quickly scrubbed it off the tiles before it could dry on them and make them look foggy. 

I showed a friend later how to tile a coffee table. It was much easier to grout when we were able to keep the tile pieces level by varying the amount of mortar on the individual pieces of tile. When using scrap tile the pieces have different thickness and keeping the pieces level not only makes grouting easier but minimizes sharp edges that could stick out. 


The table turned out amazing! Second project: stairs. We have a few stairs leading down to the kitchen that are made of wood. Each stair had a small lip that stuck out. Jerome said that this is because of a visual effect and how our brains interpret depth. People are more likely to trip without that extra lip, but it would be really hard to tile. So I got out the sawzall and butchered the stairs as I cut off the lip. Then we laid cement backer board to support the tile and create and even surface to prevent future cracking. 

The tile we used came partially from what Sarah brought that people had given her as scrap and what a friend had given us from someone else's left over tile. I decided I wanted to get creative and use our collection of bottle caps that Phoenix had claimed. This was fun but did take a little longer to lay the bottle caps. We cut tile for the step edges to that there would be not sharp edges.  This was the first time I actually used my tile saw for tile. Previously I had used it to cut glass for bottle bricks. 

 I took the most time on the top stair. At first I really got intricate and took my time . . . then I decided the stairs needed to get finished more quickly because they were being walked on and pieces were getting knocked off and sideways. . . so a number of people chipped in to make our small community stair mosaic.
 Phoenix designed the center that looks like a ship anchor/bird and Jerome finished it by grouting her creation. Before she left Sarah designed the golden cap portion near at the right that looks like a sun and the trees on the side. Phoenix and our WWOOFer Sam from Utah designed the sides of the top two stairs. A WWOOFer couple from Ohio helped to grout and water seal a couple of the stairs. Our neighbor Donna contributed clear marbles left over from tiling her coffee table (I love how these feel on my bare feet).

When applying the water sealant I used two different brands. The brand "Miracle" that Sarah recommended seemed to soak into the grout much better. The cheap brand kind of rolled around on the surface a lot and needed a lot more work to apply. 

I love sharing knowledge and stories. It is fun to read the stories in our mosaic. The point beer caps are from every time Jerome's family visits from Wisconsin. The bird tile is a hot pad I found at a local thrift store and grabbed because I wanted to copy the bird for a sketch. Gluten free cider caps tell their own story. Some of the scrap tile came from a CSA member who snatched up a bunch of tile a friend was going to throw away and shared with us.  Jerome probably knows more about the other beer caps, and maybe which WOOFers drank each. . . or maybe not, but I really like the bottle caps and would like to do more with them. 

I can claim that the tiling fits in with sustainability because we are repurposing scraps and "trash".  Done right tile can last a long time, which also is a form of sustainability.  A lot of floors include poly something or other, and maybe some of my materials do;  I think it is minimized.  There is a bit of a trade-off in the use of mortar and grout with embodied energy, but creating a creative and lasting mosaic is worth it to me.

Tile can also be laid in an earthen plaster, but our home is in the midwest and partially in the ground so I want to avoid possible moisture issues by going with more traditional tile methods on the existing cement floor.