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[Strawbale]part 2: Look Ma', no hands!



I always thought that to build a solid, load-bearing SB house it was necessary to include a tie-down system and a roof-plate.

On a recent trip investingating SB houses in Spain, I found out that this is not true.

I saw eight SB structures with know tie-down system, five of which had no roof-plate, and all were perfectly solid. The oldest of these houses is 4 years old, and hasn´t moved at all. The biggest is two stories high (29m2 per floor).

This two-story house was built using a unique technique: the man plastered each course of bales as it went up. The first three courses could be laid and plastered at once, then about one course a day, so that the straw/clay plaster had time to set. He built the whole house, alone, in less than two months. The walls have not compressed at all. The beams for the second story are placed over very small (2x2) strips of wood laid on top of the bales--no tie-down. The roof beams the same, just plastered all around with a heavy straw/clay plaster. The roof is very light-weight.

This reminds me of Tom Rijven´s system of bale-dippìng, but one step farther.

Does anyone know of any other homes (load-bearing) built without tie-down systems or roof-plates? How have they held up? If it really works (in these houses it seems to) it could save a lot of time and money in building . . .