Archive for the ‘Building Biology’ Category

EcoNest Builders Training July 2010- Chiseling & Timber Frame

Monday, July 12th, 2010

I’ve been training with my friends Paula & Robert of www.econest.com for the past few weeks.  I’ve found my niche!  I feel great joy when crafting, working with my hands, building a beautiful, healthy, holistic house with them.  I will be documenting the many learning experiences I’ve had over the next few weeks…stay posted…

Here are some pictures of me working on sawing and chiseling my very first timber frame member…

Timber frame sawing with a special Japanese hand saw

Here I am chiseling the surface perfectly flat – 90 degrees in both x and y axis.  It was so hard to do that I had to do it 2x and cut the whole thing back half an inch before I got it right.

Chiseling at 90 degrees perfectly flat to 1/32′ of an inch

Here you can see special markings indicating where and how the beam should be placed

Look at the cool suction marks that happened - looks like a tree branch...

I spent hours sanding my chisel on progressively finer japanese water sanding blocks – from 600 grit, to 800, to 1200, to 2000, to 8000 grit. Phew!  That was intense!

Here you can see how dull it is after only the first level of sanding (half an hour or so of work)

Here finally after about 3 hours or so, you can start to see the reflection of the trees above through the shine – WOW!

Even the insects are 'green' & sustainable!

Sometimes, the coolest bugs would drop by….

Laying out the timber beams to cut the mortise & tennon joints

There were about 20 of us, off and on, cutting, sawing, chiseling the joints in many pieces of timber – it was a joyous experience for several days….

Taking a break for lunch and giving thanks for the scrumptious meals that I helped Paula Baker Laporte make as well each day

Detail of Japanese Timber Frame brace - one of the pieces that I made...

Detail of a timber frame joint connection in process of coming together

Standing in front of a great accomplishment finally with the team – Feeling the satisfaction of one beam integrated with 2 posts and the second horizontal member ‘Japanese Brace’ all in place finally on the first side of the square – Yeah!!!

Sustainable Organic Farm & Educational Centre

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

Front Entry View

Front Entry View

Sustainable Organic Farm

Design description

2009

Purpose

The Farm Buildings have been designed to accommodate a family and staff, as well as occasional guests. It has been designed to provide a working example of a high performance, low embodied energy building which could easily be replicated on a larger or smaller scale.

Cross-section at Round Centre

Cross-section at Round Centre

Side Elevation

Side Elevation

Design

Main House

Access to the houses is from the Northern corner of the land. A road lined with native new-plant woodland & fruit trees leads south from the bottom of Albert Street and then curves east, along the top most west/east ridge to a crossroads centered within a large residential garden & pond. An west/east foot path track provides access to the house buildings as well as the east plots.

The house has been designed on an east-west axis to maximize passive solar gain. The house is a timber-framed or recycled steel building with a sedum/ herb roof.

Barn

The Barn is located near the house on the top ridge, central to the land, and is constructed mainly of timber and strawbale infill.

Educational Learning Centre/Storage Garage

The Centre/Garage is located in the northwest quadrant and is constructed mainly of timber and hemp/strawbale infill.

Services

There are water, sewage & electrical services accessible at the entry to the site, at the bottom of Albert Street. These services will be utilized as needed on the site.

Electricity

Electricity will mainly be supplied to the buildings from onsite solar panels, wind turbines & possibly micro-hydro from the nearby Beaver River.

Residential town hydro access to the site may be initially utilized to supplement this supply as well as selling back power to the town through this source.

Ground Floor Plan

Ground Floor Plan

Materials

The structure is either a roundwood timber-frame or recycled steel structure using local timber from the Site and/or nearby properties. The external walls of the dwellings are hemp/strawbale on a stabilized earthbag stem wall or concrete mix foundation. The floor is of FSC wood or rammed earth that will provide a large thermal mass which will serve to regulate the internal temperature conditions. The loading on the roof will be carried by trussed rafters or recycled steel. The roof will be insulated using a combination of solid and loose hemp fibre or blown cellulose insulation.

Materials are dependant on approval by Ontario Building Code regulations.

Farm Buildings Construction

Design

The House has been designed using a modular scheme which allows for a high degree of flexibility in the design of the individual dome units whilst specifying a common approach to the construction. The intention is to create a design that can be replicated easily and that is simple to construct.

Element

Material

Reason

Role

Source

Foundations

Concrete (Mix with pumice, flyash, lime…..)

Hempcrete

EarthBag

Recycled Masonry

Environment

Environment

Natural

Recycled

Structural

Structural

Structural

Structural

Local/Ontario

Local/Ontario

From site/local

Recycled/Ontario

Floors

Compressed/Rammed Earth

Wood

Adobe Brick

Concrete (Mix…hemp)

Natural

Natural

Natural

Finish

Finish

Finish

Insulative

From site/local

From site/local

Local

Local/Ontario

Walls

Timber, wood frame

Recycled Steel

Earth Bag

Strawbale

Plaster – Earth, lime

Rammed Earth

Earth bag

Recycled Denim

Hemp

Sheep wool

Cob

Eco-drywall

Natural

Natural

Recycled

Natural

Natural

Natural

Natural

Natural

Recycled

Natural

Natural

Natural

Structural

Structural

Structural

Skin

Skin

Skin

Skin

Insulation

Insulation

Insulation

Interior

Eco-drywall

Local

Recycled/Ontario

From site/local

Local

Ontario

From site/local

From site/local

USA

UK

Local

From site/local

USA

Windows Skylights

Double Glazing

Solartube

EFT

Recycled

Manufactured

Manufactured

Natural Lighting

Natural Lighting

Natural Lighting

Recycled/Ontario

USA

UK

Roof

Metal geodesic frame

Trussed joists

Plasterboard

Vapour barrier

Hemp Insulation

Green plywood

Wood boarding

Butyl Membrane

Soil [Green Roof]

Sedum/ Herb [Plants]

Recycled

Manufactured

Natural

Manufactured

Natural

Natural

Recycled/Nat.

Manufactured

From Site

From Seed

Structural

Structural

Skin

Membrane

Insulation

Finish

Structural

Membrane

Environmental

Environmental

USA

Ontario

UK

USA

Recycled/Ontario

Local

Local

Element

Material

Reason

Role

Source

Mechanical

Composting Toilets

Radiant Floor Heating

Solar Hot water heating

Wetland grey & blackwater waste management

Rainwater collection

Biomass heating stoves (per room)

Masonry Fireplace

Electrical

Building Biology principles of installation

Biogeometry EMF protection

Low energy/high efficiency bulbs

Candles

Alternative Energy Systems

Geothermal

Solar

Wind

[Micro-hydro]

Construction

The foundations will be made from a concrete mix of possibly hemp/limecrete with high flyash and/or pumice stone as well as possibly using recycled masonry (subject to building regulations approval).

The main structure will either be recycled steel or timber posts which will sit on pad foundations. They will support recycled steel or timber beams which will in turn support the roof. The floor will be insulated with hempcrete and above that will either be rammed earth or FSC wood. The external walls will be straw bale with earth plaster on the inside and lime plaster on the outside. The internal walls & finishes will be earth plaster, cob, eco-drywall with recycled denim, hemp or sheeps wool.

The roof will be supported either with recycled steel or trussed joists. These may be lightweight timber I-section beams made from recycled woodchips or local lumber. A possibility is to construct them on site using local wood from on near the site. This may eliminate the need for a large section timber roof structure. The roof will be insulated with hemp fibre or blown cellulose insulation and boarded with local or FSC wood planks or lined with [plasterboard to provide a fire retardant layer]. An EPDM membrane will provide a waterproof layer for the 70mm deep sedum/ herb roof.

Glazing will be double or triple depending on aspect. Windows and doors will be

either of softwood (FSC), recyled or local hardwood depending on their aspect.

Reversibility

The building is reversible insofar as the site could be restored to its former condition

with relative ease. After dismantling the structure the small masonry elements could

be dug up and removed. The concrete slab would need breaking up and removing

from the site. There would need to be some minor earthworks to return the site to its

previous incline.

Passive Solar Design

The Farm Buildings have been designed to maximize passive solar gain. The southern glazing

will capture the sun’s heat and this will then be stored in the massive floor.

Active Solar Design

The roof of the buildings will also incorporate solar water panels. This will be used to heat water for domestic use during the summer. Solar Water heating is technologically simple and works excellently to heat water in the summer. Water Accumulators will store this solar heat. We plan to be able to harvest all of the building’s hot water needs from the sun for 6 months of the year from the sun.

Ventilation and Infiltration

The buildings will be designed to minimize infiltration. The main entrances will be designed as airlocks.

Ventilation is provided in all of the ‘living’ rooms. In most cases this will take the form of

openable windows and trickle ventilation.

Natural lighting

All of the rooms have been designed to be lit under ordinary daylight conditions. Solartube ceiling lights will be added to supplement lighting into the rear hill side of the rooms as needed. Geodesic skylights will also be utilized in various feature areas.

Space/ Water Heating

The buildings will be designed to be super-insulated and thus require minimum heating. Heating will be provided by means of under-floor, radiant heating. This will be sourced from a large super-insulated water tank.

Heating Fuel

Fuel for heating will be sourced from a variety of different methods. Biomass stoves will be located in rooms with highest uses. A large central masonry fireplace with a significant thermal mass container will be utilized for the main rooms.

Building Biology 101

Sunday, April 12th, 2009
Eco-Nest House

Eco-Nest House

Got back late last night from a 2 day workshop at Riverside (profound place – where the only Eco-Nest in Ontario is built). I am deeply inspired and charged. Architect Paula Baker-Laport designed the building and Joshua Thorton built it. I’ve had Paula’s book on my bookshelf for years, treat it a bit like a ‘bible’ for my work and have typed up her building specifications notes throughout the book to use in my work – especially for chemically sensitive/environmental illness clients (she is like this too).

Paula Baker-Laporte

Paula Baker-Laporte, Architect, Author & Building Biologist

What is a Building Biologist? From the Building Biology Institute website;
A Bau-biologist is a researcher, architect, engineer, and doctor, all in one. He or she offers a preventive and healing medicine and a creative and unifying influence. A Bau-biologist is a worker in the global effort to solve the problems that come from modem ways of building and settlement planning—ways that disregard nature and human culture.
To work for a better and more beautiful world is an extraordinary, necessary, and satisfying job. The goal is:

  • to regain order and harmony in our surroundings,
  • to restore the balance between nature, our buildings, and ourselves
  • to help build bridges for the realization of a world that is ecologically oriented.

I highly recommend everyone should take a workshop with her and meet her one day. Paula grew up in Toronto and her mother still lives here, causing her to want to visit Toronto often. She went to U of T for her architecture degree and knew a no. of people from that ‘era’ of my life, from my early ‘20’s, really well! Her body of work is profound for me and I am so grateful that I decided to take this course at the last minute to meet her and get even better at what I love doing. I am now officially in a training stream to become a BBP – Building Biology Practitioner
I will be selling her books at the upcoming Green Living Show, April 24 – 26/09 – let me know if you want one.

Eco-Nest House

Eco-Nest House

This is the course I just took; http://www.naturalbuild.ca/baub.html
This is the Eco-Nest home where the workshop was just held; http://www.naturalbuild.ca/tydr.html (Ernie & Edith the owners are Mennonites and an incredible couple!)
http://www.bakerlaporte.com/
EVERYONE should read her articles. http://www.bakerlaporte.com/articles/index.htm
and get Paula’s book on the ‘Healthy Househttp://www.bakerlaporte.com/book.htm
or her other book on Eco-Nests http://www.econest.com/bookstore/econest.htm
Here is a great article on Building Biology that she wrote; http://www.bakerlaporte.com/articles/baubiologie.htm
Here is the Building Biology website; http://buildingbiology.net/ and some other really great articles too; http://buildingbiology.net/news.php
Here is a sample newsletter from the BB website of current workshops that shows the kind of courses that I will bring her here to do at the bottom; http://buildingbiology.net/text/mar_2009_ecodwell.pdf plus what she is doing here in Canada today and tomorrow only; http://www.naturalbuild.ca/tydr.html

Here is a list of the Building Biology Principles;

Eco-Nest Interior

Eco-Nest Interior

Building Biology Principles

From www.bau-biologieusa.com

  1. Natural building materials shall be used.
  2. Walls, floors and ceilings shall be diffusible and able to absorb water and therefore accelerate the condensation process.
  3. Indoor air humidity shall be regulated naturally.
  4. Air pollutants need to be filtered and neutralized.
  5. An appropriate balance of thermal insulation and heat retention.
  6. The air and surface temperatures of a given room needs to be optimized.
  7. A heating system should feature radiant heat using as much (passive) solar heat as possible.
  8. The total moisture content of a new building shall be low and dry out quickly.
  9. A building should have a pleasant or neutral smell. No toxins shall outgas.
  10. Light, lighting and color shall be in accord with natural conditions.
  11. Protective measures against noise pollution as well as infrasonic and ultrasonic vibrations need to be human oriented.
  12. Only building materials with little or preferably no radioactivity shall be used.
  13. The natural balance of atmospheric electricity and ion concentration shall be maintained.
  14. The Earth’s natural magnetic field shall not be altered or distorted.
  15. Man-made electromagnetic radiation shall be eliminated (or reduced as much as possible).
  16. Cosmic and terrestrial radiation is essential and shall be interfered with as little as possible.
  17. Interior and furniture design shall be based on physiological findings.
  18. Harmonic measures, proportions and shapes need to be taken into consideration.
  19. The production, installation and disposal of building materials shall not contribute to environmental pollution and high energy costs.
Masonry Wood Heater - using thermal mass to continuously radiate heat slowly.

Masonry Wood Heater - using thermal mass to continuously radiate heat slowly.