Anyone who might be interested in playing in some mud for a week in
August may want to consider a trip to Tennessee.
Aug 11-20 Natural Buildings
Summertown, TN, The Farm community.
Learn to build a "Nebraska Style" strawbale cabin, basic
techniques of cob construction, timber frame, wattle and daub, stone, mud
plasters, earth floors, living roofs, domes and compressed arches, rammed
earth and earthbags, and other examples of the natural bldg revolution.
Instructors: Joe Kennedy, Howard Switzer, Albert Bates.
Ecological design and natural building topics:
Selecting and testing materials
Natural wall systems
Foundations and drainage
Passive solar design
Siting
Hybrid natural building design
Modeling and design
Roofing and waterproofing
Specific building systems to be covered will be:
Cob building
Rammed earth bags
Adobe and other earth building techniques
Natural paints and plasters
Wattle and daub
Rubble trench foundations
Straw-bale construction
Light-clay construction
Through two hands on sessions each day, students will gain practical
experience in integrating a number of simple and valuable technologies
into one working solution.
Joseph F. Kennedy, principal of Living Earth Design and Planning, and a
founder of Builders Without Borders, will be the natural building course
instructor for our 10-day course in August. Joe received degrees in
Architecture from the University of California at Berkeley (B.A.) and the
Southern California Institute of Architecture (M.Arch.), with an
additional degree in International Peace Studies for the University of
Notre Dame (M.A.). Involved in ecological design and construction for
fourteen years, he has worked with such design pioneers as Persian
architect Nader Khalili and Welsh architect Christopher Day on a number
of innovative projects that have expanded the boundaries of ecological
architecture. He co-designed a space station habitability module for
NASA; participated in a National Endowment for the Arts-sponsored ceramic
house project: studied ancient stone towers on the island of Sardinia
with Earthwatch; and co-created a site-built earth art project with
Japanese artist, Nobuho Nagasawa, in Prague. In addition he has designed
a teacher-training center for basic needs in South Africa, where he
helped build several prototype structures based on ecological design
principles, most notably at Tholego, an ecovillage training center and
model ecovillage near Rustenburg. An associate producer on The Straw
Bale Solution video, Joe recently edited The Art of Natural
Building for NetWorks Productions, authored the Earthbag chapter
for Alternative Construction, and has produced a grade 6-8
curriculum about ecological design and natural building entitled
Homeward Bound. He has recently returned from a nine-month
research and teaching tour which brought him to different innovative
projects in Argentina, Brazil, England, Ireland and South Africa. He now
directs the summer apprenticeship program at the Ecovillage Training
Center in Tennessee.
Howard Switzer is an architect with more than 30 years experience in
building solar homes and working with natural, ecological, and recycled
materials and construction techniques. He has studied with many other
natural builders. His architecture firm designs and builds many straw and
native material structures for residential and business clients in the
Southeastern US.
Albert Bates is author of nine books on energy, environment and law, and
two films on ecovillages, and currently serves as Regional Secretary for
the Americas for the Global Ecovillage Network. He has lectured and
universities and government agencies and worked on natural buildings,
village infrastructure, and permaculture landscapes on 6
continents.
Course fees ($800) include tuition, meals, and lodging. Prices, dates and
instructors subject to change. $50 discount for payment a month in
advance or for registering a friend. Non-refundable deposit to register.
Contact us for scholarship or work-trade arrangements.
Meals at the training center generally include 3 gourmet vegan meals
(breakfast, lunch and dinner) and beverage and fruit breaks each full
course day.
About The Farm
The Farm is one of the largest and best known intentional communities in
the U.S. Located on 1750 wooded acres in south central Tennessee, it is
home to approximately 200 persons today. Founded in 1971 with a spiritual
commitment to simple living and self-reliance, The Farm has pioneered a
wide range of social and physical technologies appropriate to low-cost,
high satisfaction community living. This tradition of entrepreneurship
and progressive social change is embodied in Your Inn at The Farm. The
Inn provides comfortable accomodations for participatory training in all
aspects of village design and social organization for planetary
transformation. The surrounding Farm community offers examples of solar
building design, micro-enterprise, mushroom cultivation for food,
medicine and bioremediation, large scale composting and garden
production, and regenerative hardwood forest management.
Our courses will be useful for people with varying levels of experience,
from backyard gardeners and self-build homebuilders to design and
educational professionals.
Natural Buildings Course
Ecovillage Training Center
P.O. Box 90, Summertown TN, USA 38483-0090
* Phone 931-964-4474
* Fax: (country code +) 931-964-2200
* Email: ecovillage@thefarm.org
*
http://www.thefarm.org/etc/
"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed
citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that
ever has."
Margaret Mead
______________________________________________
* Ecovillage Training
Center
* The
Farm
* POB 90 Summertown TN 38483-0090
USA
* Tel: 931-964-4474 Fax:
931-964-2200
__________________*__________________
A whole systems immersion experience of ecovillage living, together with
classes of instruction, access to information, tools and resources, and
on-site and off-site consulting and outreach experiences.
_______________________________________
Santa Barbara
Permaculture Network
224 E. Figueroa St, #C
Santa Barbara, CA 93101
805/962-2571
sbpcnet@silcom.com