From the Desert Exposure – June 23,
2003
Straw in the Wind
There’s a new breeze blowing through home construction –
houses made of strawbales – and it's coming from New Mexico.
By David A. Fryxell
Catherine Wanek thinks the first little pig many have been onto something,
after all. Next month, her new book, The New Strawbale Home(Gibbs
Smith, $39.95), will showcase 40 homes across North America that that
are built mostly of straw.
To borrow from another chil-dren's story, Catherine has become a sort
of pied piper of the straw-bale building movement. She edited a newsletter,
The Last Straw Journal, for rive years; co-edited a previous book,
The Art of Natural Building (New Society); and has produced a series
of videotapes on strawbale construction. With her husband, Pete Fust,
she also somehow finds time to operate the Black Range Lodge in Kingston,
NM.
It's Pete who has the last laugh on the tale of the three little pigs.
"People love to bring that up," he says. "I just tell
them there's a new moral: It turns out that straw is a great building
material. You just shouldn't let a pig build your house."
Still, when you say you're building with straw, people do wonder.
As Catherine puts it, "What about fire? What about rot? What
about the Big Bad Wolf?"
One of her videos shows the fire testing performed to get strawbale
houses past New Mexico's building codes. "It's a revelation to
people," Catherine says. "The flames are licking at the
plaster that covers the bales. Its edited like High Noon so it keeps
cutting to the clock. It's a two-hour test; at the end, only two inches
of the 18-inch bale are charred."
Pete tells of a Pinos Altos couple who'd packed for an extended trip,
realized they'd forgotten something and drove half hour back to their
strawbale house – to find their wood pile in flames and fire
spreading to a wooden window frame. They put out the fire and left
again. A week later, when they came home, they noticed a wall of their
house was… hot. The fire had continued to smolder inside the
walls — but the densely packed, oxygen-starved straw had burned
only a foot or two.
"If you have a fire in a strawbale house, you have time to get
out, find a real-estate agent and buy a new house," Pete adds,
chuckling. He's a big, base-ball-cap-wearing North Dakota farmboy,
a contrast to Catherine, who's small, brown-haired, wiry— hard
to imagine her hefting a 30-40-pound bale.
Catherine chimes in that strawbale houses don't have all the nasty
chemicals of conventional con-struction which can vaporize in a fire.
The "grizzled old engineer" who supervised the code test
told her afterward that he's seen conventional foam materials "self-ignite
at low temperatures and then rain napalm."
OK, but what about rot? Doesn't straw rot? Not if you seal the water
out, Catherine explains. Kept dry, strawbales can remain inert for
centuries. That same code test also put to rest fears of the Big Bad
Wolf -- wind. The strawbale construction passed the wind-load test
"with flying colors," she says. Huff and puff away.
New Mexico and many counties in Arizona and California have okayed
strawbale construction in their building codes. In other places, would-be
builders have to jump through hoops -- often with Catherine's help.
"I got an email from an architect in Western Australia,"she
says. She showed them my video, and they promptly gave her a permit."
"It's definitely counterintuitive, but straw is a durable material,"
Pete concludes. "It's not anything new: There are marly 100-year-old
structures in Nebraska, where they invented this, that are still there
today. You can doubt the science, but you have to believe a 100-year-old
building."
Beside being, durable, straw-bale construction also saves trees: A
strawbale house uses only half the timber of a conventional one. Because
it's super-insulating, strawbale building saves fossil fuels. (But
you have to plaster both sides of the bales. Pete explains; "It's
like putting the cap on a Thermos bottle or zipping up a down jacket.
You seal the air inside the thousands of tiny capillaries inside the
strawbale.")
But there's something else, something less tangible about strawbale
houses. "Individually, a stalk of straw seems fragile, but hundreds
together, compressed and baled, make a sturdy building block,"
Catherine writes in The Art of Natural Building. Much the same could
be said for the effect of strawbale building on people in a community:
Like old-fashioned barn raisings, building a strawbale house brings
people together. And together they discover they are stronger —
strong enough to build a house.
That sense of community was a big part of what attracted Catherine
to strawbale houses in the first place. After growing up in Las Cruces,
she'd moved to Los Angeles and gotten into the movie business—first
as an electrician, then as an assistant director.
You might say fate brought her back to New Mexico. "On my honeymoon
with my first husband, we drove through Kingston and found ourselves
buying a lodge," she says. "On your honeymoon, you think
you can do anything."
That was 1984, and the 1880s stone lodge in the tiny town on the eastern
edge of the Black Range had been closed for a dozen years. At first
the couple just lived there while continuing to write screenplays,
but the 1988 Writers Guild strike impelled them to re-open the Black
Range Lodge as a bed and breakfast.
"Life in the country held much more allure," she says over
the contented cackle of chickens beyond the kitchen window. "We
were ready to share our philosophy and place with other people."
About the same time, they became interested in "permaculture”
(one definition: "conscious design and maintenance of cultivated
ecosystems which have the diversity, stability and resilience of natural
ecosystems"). Catherine says, "Once you live in the country,
garden, and connect with the land, you become more aware how much
the landscape has suffered because of humans. You don't see it in
the city. where it's all concrete and developed. Permaculture is a
way to regenerate the landscape, from your backyard to a whole bioregion."
A permaculturist they met introduced them to the notion of strawbale
building, and in 1992 they decided to give it a try with a two-story
greenhouse addition. She says, "It was a way to warm up this
leaky old stone lodge, which is the opposite of an energy-efficient
home."
They held a workshop to build the greenhouse, most of which went up
in just two days. "It was a transformative experience,"
Catherine recalls. "I got really jazzed about strawbale building
because of the energy around the workshop. It was less like work,
and more like a party."
She'd used her old Hollywood skills to videotape the construction,
and decided to make another video, this time allowing many different
strawbale houses. Separated from her first husband by now, Catherine
traveled around the country, slept in her van and filmed 10 strawbale
homes around the Southwest. She also met Pete, at the Orange County,
Calif.,Convention Center, where she was videotaping and he was exhibiting
an eco-friendly house he'd helped build. The rest is what Pete calls
"one of the many strawbale romances."
Together with an ever-shifting array of visiting enthusiasts, they've
since dotted the lodge property with nine different straw-bale structures;
ranging from a guest house to a chicken coop. The guest house, with
a breath-taking mountain view, serves as a summer escape from the
Arizona heat for Catherine's parents and as a special room for lodge
guests the rest of the year. It was recently featured in Su Casa,
a magazine published by the Homebuilders Association of New Mexico.
The Black Range Lodge has also hosted five colloquia on natural building;
the next will be in October. It's HQ for a mail-order book and video
operation (www.strawbalecentral.com). And in October 2001 it was the
site of the first training course for Builders Without Borders (www.builderswithoutborders.org),
a nonprofit organization Catherine and Pete helped to found to share
low-tech, natural-building solutions with poor communities and the
Third World.
The first little pig's house didn't last long enough for anyone to
ask the other big ques-tion about a strawbale home: What's it like?
Think of 18-by-14-by-36-inch bales of straw—the standard hales
straight off the farm work just fine—stacked like bricks. For
a 1,000-square-foot structure you need 200-230 bales. Larger, complicated
floor plans generally use a post-and-beam system, with strawbales
as infill; this scheme means you can raise the roof before you need
the bales, keeping both bales and workers dry.
You can build pretty much any style of house with strawbale that you
can with conventional techniques; the examples in Catherine's new
book range from quaint cottages to starkly modem creations. Except
for the thickness of the walls and, typically, a "truth window"
cut into the plaster somewhere inside to reveal the straw, the homes
she described and photographed could in any standard-construction
showplace from House and Garden.
That's the thing: You just can’t have thin walls. "Here
in the southwest, we love thick walls, emulating the adobe tradition"
she says. "That’s probably one reason why strawbale has
caught on in New Mexico." Though particularly popular in the
Southwest, strawbale homes have been built in nearly every state —
about 5,000 of them, most within the past 10 years. Pete predicts
that total will double in just the next two to three years.
Part of the appeal is cost savings, but he cautions that strawbale
houses are not necessarily cheaper. It all depends on how much work
you are willing to do yourself (and with the help of friends) reducing
the 65 percent of the cost of an average home today that goes toward
labor. (Pete points out that's exactly the reverse of 1948 –
the first year more American single-family homes were built by profes-sionals
rather than by the people who would live in them – when 65%
of the cost was materials.) Strawbale construction does open the door
to the possibility of doing more yourself.
In Sunland Park, NM, near El Paso, for instance, the Sisters of Charity—with
help from Builders Without Borders—are sponsoring a project
on state desert land, building 47 strawbale houses for low-income
residents. "Sweat equity" helps make that effort possible.
Ultimately, the project, dubbed Tierra Madre, will incorporate permaculture
design, passive and active solar energy, water harvesting and gray-water
reclamation.
Inevitably, strawbale construction also gets you thinking about all
those other aspects of "natural building,” a term that
Catherine coined in 1995. She says,"Strawbale enables you to
realize, ‘Hey. if I'm going this far, I really ought to examine
what else goes into my house."'
So, no, even though strawbale houses may seem at first glance just
like thick-walled versions of connventional homes, they are different.
They even feel different, often with more rounded walls and lumpier
surfaces. The thick strawbale walls keep exterior noises out and interior
noises in (one family Catherine knows built a strawbale rehearsal
room for their bass-playing son). Inside a strawbale house, well,
the word "cozy" keeps coming up. "It feels like an
embrace," says Catherine.
Huff and puff all you like —these straw houses are for keeps.