Small Strawbale: Natural Homes, Projects & Designs
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Average customer review:Product Description
Small Strawbale is a meditative exploration of the innumerable reasons to consider strawbale as a viable building material. Environmentally friendly, super insulative, economical, and natural, strawbale can be used to build everything from garden walls to small homes. Small Strawbale tells the stories of people who have successfully created structures out of this easily replenishable building material, reminding us that our human roots are ultimately grounded and dependent upon the earth and its bounties.
This practical guide is filled with rich photos of homes, greenhouses, studios, sheds, open-air structures and more, each pulsating with unique yet subtle creativity. Both a pragmatic construction manual and a philosophical, artistic guidebook, Small Strawbale is an inspirational starting point for a strawbale dreamer, and a great source of information for those who are ready to get bailing.
Bill and Athena Steen are the authors of Built by Hand, The Straw Bale House, and The Beauty of Straw Bale Houses. They are heavily involved in their nonprofit organization, The Canelo Project. Committed to developing and educating others about simple and sustainable living, they regularly teach workshops on straw bale building and artistry with clay and lime. They live in Arizona. Wayne Bingham has worked as building program director for the state of Utah for ten years and has been in private architectural practice for twenty years. He was instrumental in developing and building the AIA Habitat for Humanity house, and served as chairperson of the AIA Committee on the Environment. His work has been published in Architectural Digest and Popular Science, among others. Bill is building a straw bale home in Teton Valley, Idaho.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #227779 in Books
- Published on: 2005-05-26
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 240 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Inside Flap
Strawbale structures are the tangible creations of simple dreams and modest pocketbooks. They represent a beauty that is born of simplicity and effort rather than complexity and capital--a beauty that resounds with the satisfaction enjoyed by those who take an active part in designing and crafting their own creations.
Overflowing with beautiful, vivid color photographs, detailed illustrations, and floor plans, Small Strawbale spotlights the personal stories of people who have created simple, economical, and beautiful structures out of natural materials.
A thorough guide to building with strawbale and other natural materials, this guide includes an eclectic sampling of houses, studios, meditation spaces, outbuildings, and landscape walls. Additional ideas include strawbale alcoves, bottle windows, built-in furniture, clay ovens, as well as design guidelines for small houses, gable roofs, lofts, shed roofs, porches, seasonal shading, and pantries.
Both a pragmatic constructions manual and a philosophical, artistic guidebook, Small Strawbale is an inspirational starting point for the strawbale dreamer and a great source of information for those who are ready to get baling.
Bill and Athena Swentzell Steen are the authors of Built by Hand: Vernacular Buildings around the World, The Straw Bale House, and The Beauty of Straw Bale Homes. They are heavily involved in their non-profit organization, The Canelo Project. Committed to developing and to education people about simple and sustainable ways of living, building, and growing food, the Steens regularly teach workshops on strawbale building and artistry with clay and lime. Through their work, they have developed close ties to Mexico where they have carried out a number of projects. They live in Canelo, a small community tucked away in the secluded oak woodlands of Arizona, seventy miles southeast of Tucson.
Wayne Bingham is an architect who assists owners and builders in planning, designing, and constructing strawbale homes. He served for ten years as the building program director for the state of Utah, and was instrumental in developing and building the AIA Habitat for Humanity house. He also served as president of AIA Salt Lake, chairperson of the Design for Life Workshops, chairperson of the AIA Committee on the Environment, and a member and chairperson of the Uniform Building Codes Commission. He is the recipient of four architectural design awards and a 1997 Governor's Award for Energy Efficiency in State Facilities. His work has been published in Architectural Digest, Popular Science, The Salt Lake Tribune, Intermountain Contractor, The Deseret News, Nikkei Architecture, Utah Holiday Magazine, and Utah Architect Magazine. Bill and his wife, Colleen, are currently building their own strawbale home in Teton Valley, Idaho.
About the Author
Bill and Athena Steen are the authors of Built by Hand, The Straw Bale House, and The Beauty of Straw Bale Houses. They are heavily involved in their non-profit organization, The Canelo Project. Committed to developing and educating others about simple and sustainable living, they regularly teach workshops on straw bale building and artistry with clay and lime. They live in Arizona
Bill and Athena Steen are the authors of Built by Hand, The Straw Bale House, and The Beauty of Straw Bale Houses. They are heavily involved in their non-profit organization, The Canelo Project. Committed to developing and educating others about simple and sustainable living, they regularly teach workshops on straw bale building and artistry with clay and lime. They live in Arizona
Wayne Bingham has worked as building program director for the state of Utah for ten years and has been in private architectural practice for twenty years. He was instrumental in developing and building the AIA Habitat for Humanity house, and served as chairperson of the AIA Committee on the Environment. His work has been published in Architectural Digest and Popular Science, among others. Bill is building a straw bale home in Teton Valley, Idaho.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
This book features a collection of small strawbale houses, tiny studios, meditation spaces, outbuildings, and landscape walls. Most of them are rather simple and rectangular in shape. For the most part, they wouldn't find their way into the average architectural coffee table book or magazine. They represent a different kind of beauty, one that is born of hard work, simplicity, and an attempt to re-establish a connection with nature. A result of simple dreams and modest pocketbooks, these strawbale structures have been built largely by the efforts of their owners. They are projects the average person can afford.
This collection of featured structures represent an attempt to build simply using good materials such as straw, earth, stone, and timber; conserve energy; and have fun in the process. They are reminders that building one's own home is a desire that for the most part is inherent in all creatures and that it is only in recent times that we have begun to think of the process as something that we are incapable of doing and that needs to be delegated to experts and professionals. In no way are the structures contained herein presented as perfect examples of the best or ideal way to build. What they do represent are conscious and deliberate attempts by those hoping to rediscover the meaning of "shelter" and escape the unnecessary extravagance of modern, oversized houses and the soulless repetitiveness of mass-produced houses.
In addition to being a book about a specific building material, this guide is also very much the way we build. Building a house can be one of the most traumatic events in people's lives-not far behind death and divorce. The process is often a struggle among the owners who want the biggest house they can get for the least amount of money and the builder and architect who want and need to get as much money out of the project as they can. In the background is the bank with its timeline of the construction loan, and the vigilant shadow of the building inspector. In the end, there is the inevitable gap between the estimate and what the project actually ends up costing. People often begin the process of building their dream home with the unrealistic expectation that, once it is built, their life will be drastically improved when in actuality many are forever scarred by the process.
Customer Reviews
This is the book I've been waiting for...
I first became interested in straw construction after seeing Steve McDonald's small but functional house in the Strawbale Tour video -- it wasn't anything to brag about except for its superinsulation and especially its cost, something like four or five grand. Now this was something even I could do if I scrimped and scrounged and did most of the work myself. But since then, it seems most of the books on strawbale have backed away from the affordable owner-built homes and toward more visually appealing (and expensive) houses. Catherine Wanek's newest book, THE NEW STRAWBALE HOME, is a very nice coffeetable hardback and I'm glad I have it, but when it comes to cost there's only a few houses in it I could ever hope to afford. Sure, it becomes more cost-effective down the line when you factor in the energy savings straw permits, but let's face it, if the upfront cost is out of reach, long-term value becomes a moot point. For that reason I slowly drifted away from straw and started looking at cob construction instead. (And let me recommend an excellent book in that regard, THE HAND SCULPTED HOUSE by Ianto Evans et al.)
But SMALL STRAWBALE by the Steens has helped revive my interest. It showcases projects that are a lot more accessible to the average person or inexperienced builder -- from fences and sheds to workshops, offices, and finally small one-and-two room houses. There are helpful diagrams and floorplans but it's not a construction manual per se; for that, I still suggest BUILD IT WITH BALES by McDonald and Matts Myrhman. This book is more to show what's possible with a little straw and a little enthusiasm and a whole lot of effort, and that there's a lot to be said for building small and within one's means. The photos are top quality and very inspirational. In fact, between this and Evans' cob book, I think it's time I start shopping for land again...
A great little book on strawbale homes
Like one of the other reviewers, I too have read most every book on strawbale construction, as well as the 'ideas' books. This one though was different. The focus was more on efficient building by concentrating on a smaller-sized home than on the fact that the method or building material was strawbale, (although that too was highlighted.) Many of the other books on the subject of strawbale seem to simply replace stick-frame construction with bale walls, but leave the rest of the designs virtually unchanged. One the things that drew me to strawbale to begin with was the lowered impact on the environment by using a more sustainable product to build the walls. If we then turn around and build an inefficient home that wastes resources in other areas, what have we really acheived?
the book does NOT go into detail on either the construction methods used or the plus of using strawbale as an insulator, (all of which is covered in great detail in other books,) It does give conceptual ideas on how to make a smaller home that is efficient and esthetically pleasing to live in however, and some ideas on how to take that initial small home and 'grow' it over time to meet the changing needs of a family.
I'd recommend this book to anyone who is interested in more sustainable living, and reducing our impact on the planet by living more efficiently off the land.
Small Strawbale
I have read most of the available books on strawbale building and I rate this as one of the best. I especially liked the way this book was arranged. It included some unexpected bonus photos and information on garden walls and other small, usefull free-standing structures that were also artistically inspiring. Another unusual inclusion in this book ( and also in "The Beauty of Strawbale") were informational segments ie.Porches, Basic Design Guidelines for Small Houses, Built-in Furniture, and a very unusual segment on the sawdust toilet! These segments also seemed to give some insight into the author's evolutionary experiences.
Finally, it seems important to understand what the author's intention was in creating this book. One of the overriding challenges in spreading the potential of strawbale building is to be able to demonstrate what has been accomplished to date and to relate in an inspirational manner just how an ordinary person may duplicate these efforts. In this regard, the book succeeds admirably. If you want to find a book that tells you all you need to know about the building process then you will do better by reading one of the many fine books whose purpose that is. This book will inspire folks to begin to build with strawbales, and that beginning is the book's most valuable gift




