Peter Mack

More Straw Bale Building


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the most up-to-date information in the field of straw bale construction. By outlining lessons learned, comparing techniques, and highlighting the latest & greatest approaches, More Straw Bale Building will help the newcomer build a dream with more confidence, while giving the veteran straw baler new ideas, methods and techniques to chew on.

      — Rachel Connor, Sustainable Building Instructor, Solar Energy International

      In More Straw Bale Building, the authors detail with humour and clarity the challenges nd benefits of numerous straw bale systems they have explored both as owner/builders and as contracters.The fact that more than half the book addresses issues that come up before actually installing any straw provides a realistic picture of the preparation needed for the execution of a successful building — and the chapter on common mistakes is worth the price of the book in itself! As important resources like More Straw Bale Building become available, straw bale construction edges its way closer to being a significant mainstream alternative.

      — Kim Thompson, Straw Bale Projects

      First comes knowledge, then the doing of the job.

      And much later, perhaps after you’re dead,

      something grows from what you’ve done.

      — Rumi, Mathnawi, V, 1053

      Books for Wiser Living from Mother Earth News

      Today, more than ever before, our society is seeking ways to live more conscientiously. To help bring you the very best inspiration and information about greener, more sustainable lifestyles, New Society Publishers has joined forces with Mother Earth News. For more than 30 years, Mother Earth News has been North America’s “Original Guide to Living Wisely,” creating books and magazines for people with a passion for self-reliance and a desire to live in harmony with nature. Across the countryside and in our cities, New Society Publishers and Mother Earth News are leading the way to a wiser, more sustainable world.

       A Note from the Authors

      In our note to the first edition of this book, we expressed our surprise at having become professional straw bale builders. Those are four words that would have been unthinkable together a decade ago, and yet we are now joined by many others who have the same job description. In our province alone there are numerous builders and companies specializing in straw bale structures, and around the world the number has grown so that it’s no longer possible for all of us to know each other.

      And yet, among the many people who now make these buildings, live in these buildings, or aspire to make and live in them, we continue to find a unique kinship and understanding. The term “straw bale movement” sometimes gets bandied about. Though it’s far from an organized, cohesive movement, there is no doubt that it is growing quickly, and that many of us involved have the same goals.

      Our society is heading toward a new understanding of our built environment. For centuries, people were always closely involved with, and responsible for, the buildings they inhabited. Now we spend even more of our time in buildings, many of which are extremely unhealthy, but have lost the connection between ourselves and the places in which we live, learn, and work. As we learn ever more about how buildings work (and, just as importantly, don’t work), we understand the importance of creating buildings that are healthy, unique, beautiful, and well suited to their inhabitants.

      Learning about straw bales has been a motivating factor in this education, for us and for many others. But straw bales alone are not a solution; they are part of an answer that will take more than the rest of our lives to figure out. Everybody who takes a step in this direction is merely adding to a pool of knowledge that, someday, will see the widespread creation of buildings that meet high ideals of performance, aesthetics, and environmental appropriateness.

      Please accept this book as part of our ongoing contribution to this wider learning.

       Acknowledgments

      The authors would like to thank the following people a whole bunch:

      All of Pete’s parents

      Julie and Emma Bowen, ultimate superheroes

      Andrew McKay and Andie Haltrich

      Barb Bolin Val Bishop, and all at SSFC

      Barb Lilker

      Barry Griffith

      Becky & Sherman Butler

      Blackwell Engineering

      Bob Platts

      Camp Kawartha: Jacob, Karen, Sue, John, Dale et al.

      Cam Todd and Canadian Classic Contractors

      Catherine Wanek and Pete Fust

      Cari and Russ

      Cheryl, Beth and Grace

      Chris and Judith Plant

      Chris Walker

      Dale Brownson

      Dave McKey, Goldie and others

      David Saunders

      David and Anne-Marie Warburton

      Deirdre McGahorn

      Don Fugler

      Don Polley, may he ride forever

      Draydon Hartwig

      Frank Tettemer & Cheryl Keetch

      Gabrielle Justine Magwood

      Gail & Brian Robins

      Gary Magwood

      Gary H’s Clean Pants

      Gavin Dandy and Everdale

      Gerarda Schouten

      Glen Hunter, Joanne Sokolowski and baby Gil

      Grant Moorcroft and Moorcroft Hemp Farm

      Grassroots Store

      Great White

      Gut Hung Lo

      Habib Gonzalez

      Hank,Anita and Melissa Carr

      Helen Knibb

      Ian & Marchand, the Dynamic Duo

      Jack Seigel, Connie Cochrane, & Ryan Seigel

      James & Crissy Swan

      Jan “Concrete” Cohen

      J.D. Stevens

      Jeff Rupert

      Jenny Madden, Peter Brackenbury & Charlie’s smiles

      Jim Gleason and company

      Joe Cox

      Mr. Joe Hiscott

      John Marrow

      John Panagapka & Karen Hunsberger

      John Straube

      Big Johnnie Taylor

      John Wilson & Leigh Geraghty

      John Wise & Anita Jansman

      Jolien van der Maden

      Joy Allan & Bert Weir

      Joyce Coppinger and The Last Straw Journal

      Kara & Tony Willan

      Karen, Joseph and Elizabeth Soltan

      KATO Construction

      Ken, Kari, McKenzie and @#$#$

      Kim Thompson and her hugs

      Kris Dick