Hi there,
My husband and I are planning on having a homestead in the future. We are interested in building a kind of hay bale/cob hybrid home and I have a few questions and I thought, perhaps someone in this forum could answer them for me.
First, I should give a little background, we live in ontario and are planning on purchasing our land either in eastern or southern ontario. Due to the frigid temperature, and the troubles I have read about (http://small-scale.net/yearofmud/) as well as my background in home retrofits geared to efficiency, I realize that it is nearly impossible to build a purely cob building in this climate.
So I thought why not insulate with hay and still take advantage of the sculptural aspect as well as thermal mass that cob can offer us. I have read about bale cob construction but I do not believe that it would give us a high enough R-value for our climate.
Here is the idea, I would create a two layer wall, straw bale on the outside and cob on the inside, my roof would be a shed type. I plan on having 4 posts to support the roof (they would be separate from the structure of the actual house and stand near the end of our roofs overhang). Also, I plan on making a drop ceiling on the inside of the house in order to insulate with more hay. My floors will not be earthen, I plan on having tamped gravel, a vapor barrier more hay between floor joists and some kind of wood floors.
So my question to you fine folks is - firstly, is this a feasible idea? Secondly, would my bales need tensioning even though they will not be load baring? Is wrapping the vapor barrier up and over the foundation (probably made of urbanite) a good idea or will it make it difficult to tie into the walls? is urbanite an okay material for haybale construction, if so how would they tie together?
Thank-you for your time!
I'm excited to hear your ideas and advice.
-Melly