Be most excellent to each other.
"Think of your mind as a non-linear system that you constantly have to train"
That is highly subjective, and usually "self realizing" if you don't agree with, and understand something - completely - you are going to have a much harder time representing the method.So are there people who want to live in a cob, straw bale etc house? Yes. Are there enough to keep builders or the like going? No.
Data? This comment Sean simple does not reflect a deeper understanding nor global perspective. The two dominant building forms today (and for the last 5000 years) is timber frame and earth architecture respectfully. Your statement reflects a clearly "modern Anglo European insular mind set." Is timber, earth and stone the most common where you are AT THIS TIME, no. Yet what you are trying to convince folks of (and perhaps yourself) is that modern is better than what has come before. If you just take the actually history of your region, the way I build has been around 20 times longer, with better durability and longevity record, than the methods you are suggesting.Another very real issue is people don't want to invest a massive amount of resources into something that isn't well backed with data. This is the primary hindrance to the market when it comes to super green buildings and the lack of data effects all aspects of the process: builders, insurers, inspectors, engineers, architects etc etc etc.
True to only a point, and will only continue to be a struggle if folks keep trying to resist the logic of what has come before them. If you like big industry, and down want to step outside you confront zones, fair enough, but don't try to wrap some pretty weak logic around it to justify your position.The bottom line is unless your willing to cut the cord and move onto a piece of remote land and live off the grid on your own then you have some very real issues to grapple with.
Again Sean, you are justifying and not really making an effort to market and push what I think you know is a better way of doing housing as well as more ethical and sustainable.So the market is getting more open to these ideas but it will not currently sustain them on any real scale and that leads into one of your points... Price.
No Sean, not everyone evaluates life's tangibles on price. Many do...Many do not. On a global scale the evaluate things based on comfort, hunger, and family needs. Your number are far from "hard," are subjective, and are not taking in many other aspects and variables to the human condition - both tangible, ethical, and spiritual.Everyone evaluates life's tangibles based on price. If you spent $20,000 hard costs on your home doing a DIY but also spent 4 years getting it done then you actually didn't just spend $20k, based on average wages around here you spent about $220k or likely more depending on the hours of input. So yes you can build for $20k or less so long as you're willing to input an additional $200k of free labor into your project. These aren't hard numbers just the overall concept.
Yes you do, as well as step outside your own comfort zones, and perhaps embrace skill sets you are not familiar with or fully understand...yet.Now as I grapple with this reality of economy and the need to eat, pay bills etc I know that we have to find ways to deliver simple and cost effective solutions to the market that are relative to the average person.
For some it maybe a gamble, as it would seem to be for you, but for the majority of the world "ideology" is more important than anything (for better or worse) as we are seeing in the Middle East and the European based culture of the words struggling to relate. My ethos, both public and private is more important to me than my own life, as it is for countless millions. I agree this is a tricky subject but as it relates to architecture, its a choice not just a "turnkey solution."Does ideology and the input of personal time trump a turnkey solution? Its a roll of the dice to be sure.
If you believe that, you are absolutely correct. "Mindset" and personal beliefs, combined with confidence in your personal ethos will effect success or failure. If you don't support "alternative green" building 100% then you are going to have a real hard time (impossible?) role modeling and promoting it.So back to price. People like me are trying to work out the baby steps in getting people from McMansions to Strawbale palaces, understanding that they just WILL NOT live in a straw house.
And is highly toxic in house fires, very vulnerable to pest damage (see comments to your own post at https://permies.com/t/30149/green-building/Lets-debate-EPS-foam-insulation) a product of the "industrial complex." and the list goes on. You are choosing this. It may even have merit in some applications with the proper encapsulation (maybe?) but it doesn't even begin to have the longevity record (it simply has not been around long enough to use your own words) compared to timber, earth and stone architecture. You can keep saying to yourself that the market does not support "straw" but that is only as true as you make it. I am not a fan of structural SB architecture in general, but it is better than most modern building forms, and when augmented with timber framing, highly superior. This doesn't even begin to address the other possibilities of straw panel, clay straw infill, and the related modalities.This is why I bring up the EPS question you mention because my research is finding that it is less toxic then many other foam type insulation products, performs well, is easy to install and has a very good price point overall....
Again, you sound like a sales agent for the petroleum industry or someone trying to convince yourself. This is not the "miracle product" you present it as. Can it have application in cross over designs, yes, are there alternative, also yes.Like it or not we are surrounded by choices that run the gambit from ludicrous to ignorant and we need to make judgement calls based on the realities we are presented with no matter how they make us feel. Do I like a EPS as a step in the right direction as we educate the market about better solutions and smarter thinking? Of course but EPS is not an end state just one solution on the way to many better ones. Is EPS less toxic than XPS? Very much so.
Look Sean if you don't want to be green don't, but some of these comments borderline on the absurd. Foam is more toxic than SB, cob and many others period, it's not open for discussion as that is foolishness. If you want to use foam, use it, I do at times in some applications and in some ways, I don't pretend that it is better or what I should be doing, it is simply a reality because I tend to also use a lot of recycled materials. I use less of it all the time, and until we get plant based foams (may be never) leading the market, I probably will use less and less of it, even if recycled. As an WEMT I have seen as many deaths with trucks as I have seen with subcompacts. If you are driving a truck and are having a hard time seeing the smaller vehicles the onus is on you to change not society which understands the need for this change.I challenge you to weigh the real equations when it comes to toxicity today vs tomorrow. I could build a sod home (that my wife won't be happy living in) that costs a mountain of wood to keep warm or a passive solar home insulated with EPS, which has the smaller overall footprint? Its like hybrid cars, yes they use less fuel but the manufacturing of the technology that goes into the car is hugely toxic, or the "super green" guy I passed the other day on the street riding his bike bringing his kids home from school in a snow storm with 4" of the white stuff already accumulated on the road and he's sliding all over the place. Does his choice to be green stop that prius from killing his kids when he wipes out in front of the oncoming car that can barely see him? If that were to happen how will it effect his family in the long run or how will it effect the family of the prius driver? So for the last time we have to compare against realities not ideals.
Risk..what Risk? PE are some of the most pragmatic lot of folk I have ever worked with, mine especially. It works, or it doesn't it's that simple and he has no issue putting his stamp on one of my timber frames, if he won't for some reason, then I have to make a modification in strength, it's that simple, the thermal envelope has no bearing on it unless someone wants to make an issue. Until the consumer public pushes back, government won't change. I find it usually does if you approach authorities with confidence and don't create issues where there are none. Cellulose insulation is accepted almost everywhere and saw dust, clay chip, clay straw is all predominantly cellulose. A lot of these issue can be address by your language and not asking questions, you don't really need answers to when exploring what some (apparently you?) think as alternative building systems.Generally speaking if you want to contend with your local government building codes you need to employ an engineer who is willing to risk his stamp on your building envelope.
Be most excellent to each other.
"If you want to save the environment, build a city worth living in." - Wendell Berry
"Think of your mind as a non-linear system that you constantly have to train"
Be most excellent to each other.
Seth Wetmore wrote: I am not a practitioner of permaculture due to not having a PDC ( I could be sued. fun huh.). =
How permies.com works
What is a Mother Tree ?
Burra Maluca wrote: Only graduates of a Permaculture Institute can teach "permaculture"...[/i]
Realize your potential by simplifying your life.
"Learn how to see. Realize that everything connects to everything else."
~ Leonardo Da Vinci
Be most excellent to each other.
Be most excellent to each other.
Jay C. White Cloud wrote:Sorry Sean, I have to challenge you on some of your points. some are subject and others are simply not true overall. In general I read what you write, and it presents more as a justification for your belief systems in construction than the actual realities on many (not all) fronts. You want to be "green," but the skill sets are not the same as conventional systems which it is obvious from what you share, that mainstream building practices are what you know, understand, and can make money at when marketing it to clients. I can see that, but it does not change this is a web site for "Permaculturists," and "Natural and/or Traditional builders," not modern industrial complex supported modalities.
Yes I'm aware of where I am. What I'm saying isn't meant to be a challenge to what you believe to be the "right way", I'm only answering a thread that was basically directed at me (ref EPS). Frankly you have zero idea what I market to clients. I'm really trying t find ways to market as natural a method as possible to the market in general. My goal isn't to just address the 1% of 1% who are already there and fully engaged, the goal is to market to the 25% who are interested changing their lifestyles in context to where they live. "Permaculture" whatever name you want to give it or box you want to put it in only has limited value if it is only allowed to effect an incredibly small group of people, and the current logistical and governmental roadblocks are reflective of the exclusivity of the practices (not that I think those here are trying to exclude anyone). We need to find ways to make it work across the board. If we want to effect the larger population around us we have to communicate on their level and work towards those goals. You can disagree and that's fine this is just two opinions voiced on the internet.
That is highly subjective, and usually "self realizing" if you don't agree with, and understand something - completely - you are going to have a much harder time representing the method.So are there people who want to live in a cob, straw bale etc house? Yes. Are there enough to keep builders or the like going? No.
Whos method? Your specific brand, because its the best? This is completely subjective.
Data? This comment Sean simple does not reflect a deeper understanding nor global perspective. The two dominant building forms today (and for the last 5000 years) is timber frame and earth architecture respectfully. Your statement reflects a clearly "modern Anglo European insular mind set." Is timber, earth and stone the most common where you are AT THIS TIME, no. Yet what you are trying to convince folks of (and perhaps yourself) is that modern is better than what has come before. If you just take the actually history of your region, the way I build has been around 20 times longer, with better durability and longevity record, than the methods you are suggesting.Another very real issue is people don't want to invest a massive amount of resources into something that isn't well backed with data. This is the primary hindrance to the market when it comes to super green buildings and the lack of data effects all aspects of the process: builders, insurers, inspectors, engineers, architects etc etc etc.
Again your making it about you and its not. Frankly I'm shocked that you know so much about my region. There are no buildings standing that I have seen older then 150 years. The only people who lived in my specific area before urban development were largely nomadic or settlers who's homes are long gone. Although if you go 1000 kilometers east you'll find longhouses etc you don't find that here nor will you find a comparable climate. I have no standing proven "old ways" structures to compare to, what I do have is a wide array of options to choose from here and now. We do have older homes and buildings and the 100 year mark is about their lifespan without massive upgrades, those timber framed sawdust insulated houses built on stone foundations are falling down and rotting away. My piece of the world and the one you work in may not be the same... thats ok.
True to only a point, and will only continue to be a struggle if folks keep trying to resist the logic of what has come before them. If you like big industry, and down want to step outside you confront zones, fair enough, but don't try to wrap some pretty weak logic around it to justify your position.The bottom line is unless your willing to cut the cord and move onto a piece of remote land and live off the grid on your own then you have some very real issues to grapple with.
Ideology is great but if not tempered with time, the plan to communicate, and the steps required to get there then it will never have scalable effect. This is the point isn't it? To get people to start down the path at a volume that actually has an effect on the world? People have real issues to work out for themselves, its not a simple question of how to build its a question of how to live. Just because you've crossed the line doesn't mean everyone else is there with you in exactly your spot just begging to do exactly what you're doing if only you would show them how... (this really ins't specific to YOU personally its specific to everyone trying to offer a solution)
Again Sean, you are justifying and not really making an effort to market and push what I think you know is a better way of doing housing as well as more ethical and sustainable.So the market is getting more open to these ideas but it will not currently sustain them on any real scale and that leads into one of your points... Price.
No Sean, not everyone evaluates life's tangibles on price. Many do...Many do not. On a global scale the evaluate things based on comfort, hunger, and family needs. Your number are far from "hard," are subjective, and are not taking in many other aspects and variables to the human condition - both tangible, ethical, and spiritual.Everyone evaluates life's tangibles based on price. If you spent $20,000 hard costs on your home doing a DIY but also spent 4 years getting it done then you actually didn't just spend $20k, based on average wages around here you spent about $220k or likely more depending on the hours of input. So yes you can build for $20k or less so long as you're willing to input an additional $200k of free labor into your project. These aren't hard numbers just the overall concept.
You missed the point, money is just a store of time and energy. The cost of everything in life is time and energy, its the only way to fight the natural state of breakdown in nature. So you can choose to put your time and energy into something in exchange for money or whatever you want it really doesn't matter. I'm just making the point that people have to recognize that it all has a cost. You can choose to live completely free of money and the reality is the same. You can choose to live on less, with the hope that you are going to have to input less time and energy. So put a dollar figure on it or don't the physical constants remain the same.
Yes you do, as well as step outside your own comfort zones, and perhaps embrace skill sets you are not familiar with or fully understand...yet.Now as I grapple with this reality of economy and the need to eat, pay bills etc I know that we have to find ways to deliver simple and cost effective solutions to the market that are relative to the average person.
Exactly but as a GC I don't need to master every skill set nor fully understand them, I just need to have enough understanding and work with the right people to put those skills together and deliver the building people want at a price then can afford one way or another. My goal is to separate myself from the majority of my peers by offering more sustainable solutions
For some it maybe a gamble, as it would seem to be for you, but for the majority of the world "ideology" is more important than anything (for better or worse) as we are seeing in the Middle East and the European based culture of the words struggling to relate. My ethos, both public and private is more important to me than my own life, as it is for countless millions. I agree this is a tricky subject but as it relates to architecture, its a choice not just a "turnkey solution."Does ideology and the input of personal time trump a turnkey solution? Its a roll of the dice to be sure.
Yes everyone's ideology is a dominant factor in their decision making process. Not everyone shares priorities or values etc, nor can your make them. You can however offer better solutions to what they have now and in a way that they can feel comfortable with. I don't need to drive people towards what I or you believe to be the "right choice" I just want to offer better choices at whatever level they feel comfortable. This is the problem, you can life a fully self sustaining life in a hobbit house and be happy with that but your brother or neighbor may not share your view. What I'm saying is temper yourself and recognize that the world may never be able to accept your ideology and that if you want to influence people in that direction it takes time, a plan and milestone accomplishments along the way. If I can influence someone that they can choose a passive solar option that uses EPS and its the limit of what they are willing to accept is that not a better state then letting them just have a standard solution?
If you believe that, you are absolutely correct. "Mindset" and personal beliefs, combined with confidence in your personal ethos will effect success or failure. If you don't support "alternative green" building 100% then you are going to have a real hard time (impossible?) role modeling and promoting it.So back to price. People like me are trying to work out the baby steps in getting people from McMansions to Strawbale palaces, understanding that they just WILL NOT live in a straw house.
So its only right if I define "green building" on your terms? I support what I see making sense I don't want to nail myself to the door of any ideology based on what someone on the internet says, nor should anyone reading this. If anyone reads this thread and comes away with either timber frame or EPS remote walls are "the answer" then we both fail.
And is highly toxic in house fires, very vulnerable to pest damage (see comments to your own post at https://permies.com/t/30149/green-building/Lets-debate-EPS-foam-insulation) a product of the "industrial complex." and the list goes on. You are choosing this. It may even have merit in some applications with the proper encapsulation (maybe?) but it doesn't even begin to have the longevity record (it simply has not been around long enough to use your own words) compared to timber, earth and stone architecture. You can keep saying to yourself that the market does not support "straw" but that is only as true as you make it. I am not a fan of structural SB architecture in general, but it is better than most modern building forms, and when augmented with timber framing, highly superior. This doesn't even begin to address the other possibilities of straw panel, clay straw infill, and the related modalities.This is why I bring up the EPS question you mention because my research is finding that it is less toxic then many other foam type insulation products, performs well, is easy to install and has a very good price point overall....
Yes in the past we build with dirt, wood and stone. Also in the past we accepted shorter life spans, chronic health issues due to cooking and heating fires, physical degradation due to poor living conditions etc etc. In the past the only people who really had a building that would last multi generations were either specifically skilled in building them or had way more resources then the average person. In the past we accepted homes where the heating costs were enormous because the supply of fuels far outweighed demand. In the past people just lived with the health risks of a moldy home. Its always easy to look at the past and say those were the golden years, a time when we all knew how to live... truth is that argument is complete bullshit. In the past people were much the same as they are today, they made the same kinds of choices that we do today and they generally did the best they felt they could for themselves and families just like we do today. The major difference between then and now is that we have access to an unfathomable amount of information compared to our great grand parents. Today we have the ability to communicate and make choices with more options and hopefully do better or at least do the best we can with what we have.
Again, you sound like a sales agent for the petroleum industry or someone trying to convince yourself. This is not the "miracle product" you present it as. Can it have application in cross over designs, yes, are there alternative, also yes.Like it or not we are surrounded by choices that run the gambit from ludicrous to ignorant and we need to make judgement calls based on the realities we are presented with no matter how they make us feel. Do I like a EPS as a step in the right direction as we educate the market about better solutions and smarter thinking? Of course but EPS is not an end state just one solution on the way to many better ones. Is EPS less toxic than XPS? Very much so.
I think that is my point isn't it?
Look Sean if you don't want to be green don't, but some of these comments borderline on the absurd. Foam is more toxic than SB, cob and many others period, it's not open for discussion as that is foolishness. If you want to use foam, use it, I do at times in some applications and in some ways, I don't pretend that it is better or what I should be doing, it is simply a reality because I tend to also use a lot of recycled materials. I use less of it all the time, and until we get plant based foams (may be never) leading the market, I probably will use less and less of it, even if recycled. As an WEMT I have seen as many deaths with trucks as I have seen with subcompacts. If you are driving a truck and are having a hard time seeing the smaller vehicles the onus is on you to change not society which understands the need for this change.I challenge you to weigh the real equations when it comes to toxicity today vs tomorrow. I could build a sod home (that my wife won't be happy living in) that costs a mountain of wood to keep warm or a passive solar home insulated with EPS, which has the smaller overall footprint? Its like hybrid cars, yes they use less fuel but the manufacturing of the technology that goes into the car is hugely toxic, or the "super green" guy I passed the other day on the street riding his bike bringing his kids home from school in a snow storm with 4" of the white stuff already accumulated on the road and he's sliding all over the place. Does his choice to be green stop that prius from killing his kids when he wipes out in front of the oncoming car that can barely see him? If that were to happen how will it effect his family in the long run or how will it effect the family of the prius driver? So for the last time we have to compare against realities not ideals.
You think my point is about cars, trucks or sod homes???
Risk..what Risk? PE are some of the most pragmatic lot of folk I have ever worked with, mine especially. It works, or it doesn't it's that simple and he has no issue putting his stamp on one of my timber frames, if he won't for some reason, then I have to make a modification in strength, it's that simple, the thermal envelope has no bearing on it unless someone wants to make an issue. Until the consumer public pushes back, government won't change. I find it usually does if you approach authorities with confidence and don't create issues where there are none. Cellulose insulation is accepted almost everywhere and saw dust, clay chip, clay straw is all predominantly cellulose. A lot of these issue can be address by your language and not asking questions, you don't really need answers to when exploring what some (apparently you?) think as alternative building systems.Generally speaking if you want to contend with your local government building codes you need to employ an engineer who is willing to risk his stamp on your building envelope.
"Think of your mind as a non-linear system that you constantly have to train"
Be most excellent to each other.
Be most excellent to each other.
Be most excellent to each other.
Seth Wetmore wrote:Thank you for up dating use Sean. There is no one perfect option. I also agree with the idea of making the best of what you have available. Baby steps are always encouraged, easier to change direction when a problem arises. I would like to know if you have looked into alternative sources of clean energy for buildings. Curious what you find interesting or valuable. Thanks
"Think of your mind as a non-linear system that you constantly have to train"
Be most excellent to each other.
Seth Wetmore wrote:Energy. The ability to alter matter into energy seems to be the problem. We burn the fuels that have the highest hydrogen value, just to heat water to pass by a turbine creating D.C. current. For the moment this is the dominent form of energy production in America/ not the world.
Hydro power forces water to pass through a turbine to create D.C. power.
Wind turbines have air pass them to create D.C. power.
Neuclear heats water to pass by a turbine to create D.C. power.
Ask me about food.
How Permies.com Works (lots of useful links)
Miles Flansburg wrote:
Seth Wetmore wrote:Energy. The ability to alter matter into energy seems to be the problem. We burn the fuels that have the highest hydrogen value, just to heat water to pass by a turbine creating D.C. current. For the moment this is the dominent form of energy production in America/ not the world.
Hydro power forces water to pass through a turbine to create D.C. power.
Wind turbines have air pass them to create D.C. power.
Neuclear heats water to pass by a turbine to create D.C. power.
We make AC power not DC.
Be most excellent to each other.
"Think of your mind as a non-linear system that you constantly have to train"
Be most excellent to each other.
"Think of your mind as a non-linear system that you constantly have to train"
Seth Wetmore wrote:Miles did I miss something? The generator that the power plant you are using starts by making D.C. power then converts it to A.C. power for transmission. Could you send me general (nonspecific) specs on the type of generator you are useing. I would be interested to know that there is a generator that goes straight to A.C. power. I could be way behind the times on physics, and new tech for power plants. I would greatly appriciate new knowledge. Thanks Seth
How permies.com works
What is a Mother Tree ?
Seth Wetmore wrote:Miles did I miss something? The generator that the power plant you are using starts by making D.C. power then converts it to A.C. power for transmission. Could you send me general (nonspecific) specs on the type of generator you are useing. I would be interested to know that there is a generator that goes straight to A.C. power. I could be way behind the times on physics, and new tech for power plants. I would greatly appriciate new knowledge. Thanks Seth
Be most excellent to each other.
Be most excellent to each other.
Be most excellent to each other.
Be most excellent to each other.
Seth Wetmore wrote:Ok back on subject.
Power conversion from fuels to energy.
Requires combustion of most of the fuels.
This burning of fuels it considered Toxic.
SO.
Do you have any ideas to create huge amounts of power, at relativly low costs that is less toxic than our current fuel sources.
It has to be reliable. It has to be implemented inexpensivly.
Bill Mollison suggested the Trompe.
Are there other ways to create power with out burning Things that are toxic for the environment?
"Think of your mind as a non-linear system that you constantly have to train"
Be most excellent to each other.
"Think of your mind as a non-linear system that you constantly have to train"
That's my roommate. He's kinda weird, but he always pays his half of the rent. And he gave me this tiny ad:
GAMCOD 2025: 200 square feet; Zero degrees F or colder; calories cheap and easy
https://permies.com/wiki/270034/GAMCOD-square-feet-degrees-colder
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