Hi hi,
Currently in the process of putting together a garden room with load-bearing
straw walls as a precursor to bigger things. Here's the plan:
and here's a view of where I am so far:
The sequence goes: gravel pits (I'm on very hard clay subsoil with very expansive made ground on top); blocks on top of those (stone was too expensive, and I'm very much not a fan of the tyre approach); box beam on top of those; baseplate on top of that; and now the straw (barley, managed to find a farmer basically next door).
Not visible in the pics, but I'm three bales high along the west and I've got the doors hung, so hooray for that.
The plan is to lime render three of the sides and internally, but we're late in the season for that so it's probably going to stay covered until spring.
The fourth side butts up against a brick retaining wall at the edge of the property, which is all sorts of fun. I've ended up dipping the bales in lime render (for fire and critter protection) before setting them in the wall:
Currently I'm trying to design the roof. Bit weird to start without having an idea of that rather important piece, but I'm a little hamstrung by planning here in the UK - I can only go to 2.5M above ground level without getting permission. With the retaining wall, I might technically have started building
underground (they take ground level as the highest bit of ground immediately adjacent to the building); if so, I have perhaps 800mm to "spend" on the roof, which might barely be
enough to get a 5/12 pitch in, permitting cedar shingles which I'm quite keen on.
Aside from showing off the work so far, I'm interested in thoughts on the roof design, if anyone cares to share some. I'm struggling to reason about it with the "curved" wall (it's actually just coming off at 105° rather than 90° either side; I plan to fake the curve in the straw and render) in the mix.
One thought I had was a fairly basic hip - here's some very basic CAD -
Presumably the different rafter lengths can be worked out just by (very accurately) cutting different angles along each of the common rafters, allowing me to keep just a single plane along the curved wall? Or is it more complicated than that? The nightmare scenario would be needing to break it up into 3 or 4 planes for some as-yet-unanticipated reason.
Anything that requires less accurate measuring would be great, though, as my joinery really isn't up to much! I've been looking at pictures and plans of roofs until I've gone cross-eyed, recently, but applying them to this D shape is turning out to be a struggle for me. Bonus points if it's something that permits an open roof space - having a ceiling at 2M high isn't super amazing.
(The floor will be suspended
wood, and I've got the detail of that mostly worked out, at least... I just can't put it in until I'm finished with the walls, for access reasons).
Despite the straw, thermal performance isn't super-important in this build; it's more about the acoustic properties, and working out whether I'd actually like to build like this on bigger projects.