Rethink Your Life!
Finance, health, lifestyle, environment, philosophy
The Work of Art and The Art of Work
Kiko Denzer on Art



[Cob] The mobile home...

Lee Courtney heylee34 at hotmail.com
Fri Apr 7 19:36:34 CDT 2006


Ok it started with wanting/needing a shed.  I have read about cob and 
earthbags and rammed tires etc as an affordable way to get this done.  I 
have experimented with all methods.  Cob has been the most enjoyable and 
creative and simple and easy method that I've found and my soil works well 
with it.  So I'm going to have this beautiful sculpted shed next to my old 
ugly mobile home. Now I also want to add a sunroom and office to my house 
and of course I want to use cob. So I'll have this beautiful earthen shed 
and room additions attached to this old ugly mobile home. The reason I was 
doing the mobile home instead of just starting from scratch is, as I have 
said, to use the existing electricity and plumbing and roof.  Most of the 
expense of cobbing from what I have read are those things (along with 
windows and doors, etc).  I can just cob around the existing windows and 
doors that are already set in place.  I am excited about doing this myself 
and am a single mom with three kids.  If I can save some money then I need 
to do so.  I love earthen architecture, the look, the feel, the thick walls, 
and the feeling of living with the earth instead of just on it, but I also 
need to be practical and I would like to use the resources I have instead of 
just getting rid of them. The room additions will be a new cob building 
along with a cob floor.  Do you understand where I am going and coming from?
Lee

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Shody Ryon" <qi4u at yahoo.com>
To: "Lee Courtney" <heylee34 at hotmail.com>
Sent: Friday, April 07, 2006 6:34 PM
Subject: Re: [Cob] The mobile home...


> It sounde like a waste of time; meaning you will spend
> 4 times the time you would spend starting from new
> construction. One of joys/beauties of cob is the
> grounded naturalness of it. If that is an aspect of
> cob is not appealing to you; then what is it about cob
> that you like? Have you ever walked bare foot on cob
> floor? It feels alive and I feel strong and connected
> to mother earth. I sounds like you are incorperating a
> supersized big mac meals in a 100% vegan diet. YOu can
> do what ever you want but I don't understand where you
> are going or comming from.
> Shody
>
> --- Lee Courtney <heylee34 at hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the input on my previous yet apparently
>> wacky idea.  The vote is unanimous to get rid of the
>> mobile.  Ok so here is a question... In order to
>> save money can I strip out the mobile home, i.e.
>> remove siding, insulation and dryway to where there
>> is only the stick frame of the old house, and use
>> cob as filler in the existing frame? This would
>> allow me to keep the roof, the existing electrical,
>> and the plumbing. I am considering exposing and
>> redoing the plumbing anyway to use the greywater for
>> the plants and lawn (and I have a well).  I know
>> nothing of electricity and I don't really want to
>> mess with that to much.  Ideas on this plan and if
>> feasible, how thick should the walls be since I will
>> have the original frame for the support of the roof
>> etc....
>>
>> Thanks in advance again
>> Lee
>> _______________________________________________
>> Coblist mailing list
>> Coblist at deatech.com
>> http://www.deatech.com/mailman/listinfo/coblist
>>
>
>
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