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Hello
and welcome.
This is the web site of Brian Waite’s strawbalehouse design.
This design is registered with the patent office No 4001748.
It seems
to me that we are the Kamikaze generation!
Our terrible legacy to our children is to be global warming because
we are selfishly squandering most of the fossil fuels and polluting
the damned planet in the process. I am appalled by our impact upon
the worlds ecology and saddened by how much pollution is due to
the energy demands of our inefficient homes.
With
ten of the warmest years on record being in the last twelve
years it seems that we are blundering into an unsustainable
ecological and energy future!
The craziness is that it costs money to be a polluter. New UK
homes use three and a half times the energy of German or Scandinavian
homes and energy is and will be expensive – in many ways.
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Unfortunately
the words “eco” & “green” have a hollow
ring now they have been hi-jacked by politicians, nevertheless we
will all have to think “green” if we are to create a
more sustainable future for following generations.
It is difficult for individuals to have any effect but self-builders
do have a chance to reduce their impact by careful choice of materials
and services.
So I
have this idea! - for a low cost, low energy, building with a minimal
carbon footprint.
Brief C.V. I have, for forty years, earned my living from my (usually
patented) engineering designs.
I
have built homes for myself and have done a lot of architectural
design but I am not an architect.
Over the years of building my own homes I have proved the financial
and comfort benefits of investing in high quality building with,
at the time, “over the top” insulation, and now
we need to use more – much more.
However most insulation has high “embodied energy”
incurred from its production and distribution. |
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Therefore it
seems logical to use a natural material that is so abundant that
it mostly goes to waste, that is local and reproduced annually yet
is durable and cheap. That, of course, is straw.
Why
a house of straw?
The UK alone produces 4 million tons of surplus straw every
year – enough for 250,000 homes.
Straw must have the lowest embodied energy of any building material
and is probably the cheapest and most sustainable. Straw-bales
have an insulation “U” value much better than required
by the building regulations as well as excellent sound deadening
properties which, together, give a living space an ambience
that has to be experienced to be appreciated. |
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Contrary to
common perception straw-bales in a building, are not a fire risk,
are not a vermin risk and are not short-term, but would compost
back into the earth if and when required to do so. Straw in bales
is so tightly bound that it doesn’t contain enough air to
support combustion, just add a (carbon neutral) “breathing”
lime render/plaster and any fire regulation requirement is easily
met. There is no nutritional value in straw and so it does not attract
vermin, it is only voids that vermin like, so proper attention to
detail is the only precaution needed. Lime rendered straw-bales
“breath” so evening out fluctuations of humidity thereby
creating a healthier environment.
The problem is how straw homes are perceived.
Strawbale houses need to come out of the realm of committed radicals
and into the mainstream of buyers if they are to contribute to more
eco-friendly housing. This is in no way a detrimental comment on
the pioneering hard work done by others in promoting the use of
straw in building, just an attempt to move things on a notch.
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to an engineer, like myself, and all the homeowners, from whom
I have canvassed opinions, most houses made of straw-bales seem
to reinforce the children’s storybook illusion of straw
houses being flimsy and vulnerable and therefore definitely
not worth devoting ones working life paying for, with their
resale value being the biggest worry. They have “the big
bad wolf” syndrome, yet straw-bale homes in Nebraska USA
are over 100 years old and still fit for purpose. |
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My solution.
To try to overcome this reticence I have devised a more solid “engineered”
design for a house that uses straw-bales as the main form of heat
and sound insulation yet has a robust exterior that will cope with
harsh weather and exposed locations. It is an attempt to overcome
the “insubstantial” impression most straw houses give
to the unconverted buyer. The quaintness of the usual straw house
is indeed part of their charm to some, but my design is intended
to give a more reassuring appearance, thereby extending the advantages
of straw to a wider spectrum of buyers who find that roughness off-putting.
After all, however much we all want to be ecologically sympathetic,
in the end, we have to be convinced that our purchase is sound.
The
design. KISS (Keep It Simple & Straw)
The design came from my experience of converting and living so comfortably
for 20 years in a 15cty Kent barn.
The straw insulated house I propose will have the straw bale walls
and roof as one.
The cross section is very similar to the medieval “cruck”
frame in shape but made of deep curved composite wooden “I”
beams, which serve as both rafters and studding, set onto a plinth
wall of local materials. The straw bales will be sandwiched between
these beams, which are like “ribs”, that continue for
whatever length of building is required - at one bale spacing. Paired
together like a bowed “A” frame they have the inherent
strength of the “A” frame but contain more volume so
will easily accommodate an upstairs for all or part of the length
of the building. This gentle curved shape allows the straw bales
to rise, seamlessly, all the way up to the ridge.
The
inside and outside is to be rendered with a “breathing“
lime plaster and, after allowing a ventilation space, the outside
can be battened then tiled, shingled or even thatched according
to local sympathies.
The whole structure is to be set on a low plinth wall of brick
or stone.
Calculations so far show the strawbalehouse is close to “passive
house” standards. |
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This simple
design is eminently suitable to being developed as a kit house,
not just for homes but also as small workshops and art galleries
– just add ridge glazing.
The design configuration is an elegant alternative to the conventional
straw bale house because it avoids that awkward change of direction
between vertical wall and horizontal ceiling which is a potential
thermal and structural weak spot.
Although straw is capable of load bearing I have chosen this unusual
wood frame configuration to give the building a more substantial
structure.
This is intended to help overcome the resistance that most home
owners have to the “organic” appearance of straw houses
whilst giving a spectacular interior that leaves the owner an uncluttered
vaulted space in which to do their own thing. It can be any length
- a building in it’s own right with or without a first floor
for all or part of its length, an extension or wing of a larger
build by being abutted to another structure etc. It could also be
built in stages as the family or its finances grow.
However
straw is not the complete answer for a low energy building.
For a home I would try to add an ICF earth-sheltered basement/garage/utility,
with some high-density thermal mass to help stabilise the indoor
climate. This mass would be orientated to get the maximum winter
solar gain, yet very little in summer. (ICF = Insulated Concrete
Formwork, also proposed to be used in the plinth wall.)
Solar hot water, of course, and a ground source heat pump [GSHP]
coupled to underfloor heating that, hopefully, could be run on electricity
from renewable sources such as photovoltaic cells when they become
more viable.
Add to this serious rainwater harvesting for loo flushing and the
washing machine.
For rural homes, only a small area of land is enough to be self-sufficient
in (carbon neutral) wood to fuel a room sealed woodstove as a homely
supplement to GSHP. (Get energy from junk mail)
Heat
recovery and ventilation units (HRVU) are very efficient and
will become widespread under the new regulations on air change
in living spaces. However I am not sure of the wisdom of sealing
buildings, I prefer natural materials that breath, most modern
paints don’t and they give off VOC’s, as do fitted
carpets and they also harbour mites.
The rise of asthma is not unconnected but a tip for Asthma sufferers;
central vacuuming is a great help. |
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Dust is removed
from the house instead of being filtered into smaller more irritating
particles and redeployed!
Conclusion
In response to our global predicament my individual contribution,
for what it’s worth, is this proposal for an eco-friendly,
energy efficient, simple, low cost building that uses, as the main
form of insulation, a cheap and readily available material that
is sustainable, local and a cheap by-product of food production.
The building can be an expandable self-build home, studio, workshop
or art gallery. However the design is limited to the configuration
described, albeit with numerous variations, so does not pretend
to be the all singing all dancing answer on how to use strawbales,
but I hope it will make the use of strawbales more appealing to
a wider market thereby reducing our use of fossil fuels and lessen
our increasing dependence upon foreign supplies.
The design was
registered in June 2007, planning was refused in August 2007
Because of “alien” materials and “Cumbria is not
the place for innovation”.
I appealed at the end of August and fortunately the inspectorate
allowed my
appeal so granting me permission to build the prototype. Work will
start as soon
as the Cumbrian weather allows. (February 2008)
For more information please go to “contact” Brian Balfern
Waite |