Rethink Your Life! Finance, health, lifestyle, environment, philosophy |
The Work of Art and The Art of Work Kiko Denzer on Art |
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[Cob] (no subject)David Knowlton pilot1ab80 at hotmail.comFri Apr 2 14:18:47 CST 2004
hi, i angered some folks by suggesting that someone engineer a way to make sustainable building commercially profitable. my idea was that if it's good for the planet, why not make money at it? money is good. (i'm conservative) detractors felt i had tainted an idea central to cob - that being that by doing it yourself you can be free of a 30 year mortgage, which i think they viewed as being a nasty capitalist form of enslavement. more power to the folks that have time to do it themselves. more power still if you can afford to eat while you build your own place. meanwhile - cob is still grass roots. if someone out there figures out how to make mud houses commercially viable - please post. i'll buy stock certificate number 1. good building to you. david >From: "Shannon C. Dealy" <dealy at deatech.com> >Reply-To: dealy at deatech.com >To: The Pruett's <JILLPRUETT at peoplepc.com> >CC: Cob <coblist at deatech.com> >Subject: Re: [Cob] (no subject) >Date: Fri, 2 Apr 2004 11:30:50 -0800 (PST) > >On Fri, 2 Apr 2004, The Pruett's wrote: > > > What is the average cost per square foot (or length foot) of cob? > > Not including all the other house building needs there are, of course. > > A site I follow says it is $400/LF for adobe. Isn't that a lot? > > > > jill > >No meaningful average is possible. If you do it yourself (and don't pay >yourself), use only materials from the site, the cost is $0. If on the >other hand, you hire someone to do it, have all the materials trucked in, >then it depends on a whole lot of things (foot mixing or mechanical >mixing, do you hold a workshop to offset some of the costs, how readily >are materials available in your area, what does it cost for trucking, >etc.) > >That $400/LF for adobe is almost certainly for paying someone to do it, >but there are many factors not stated which need to be considered: how >tall is the wall (1 LF 8' tall is alot cheaper than 1 LF 16 feet tall), >does this include foundation, was it engineered for a heavy earthquake >zone, how far are the adobe blocks being trucked to get them to the site, >are they figuring just the wall costs or are they averaging in the total >cost of the building, etc. > >Shannon C. Dealy | DeaTech Research Inc. >dealy at deatech.com | - Custom Software Development - > | Embedded Systems, Real-time, Device Drivers >Phone: (800) 467-5820 | Networking, Scientific & Engineering Applications > or: (541) 929-4089 | www.deatech.com > > >_______________________________________________ >Coblist mailing list >Coblist at deatech.com >http://www.deatech.com/mailman/listinfo/coblist _________________________________________________________________ Get rid of annoying pop-up ads with the new MSN Toolbar FREE! http://toolbar.msn.com/go/onm00200414ave/direct/01/
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