Hi all
recently I have been obsessed with dome homes, like the ones here:
Monolithic — Home of the Monolithic Dome
There are a number of advantages of this type of home compared to ordinary homes, you can read about that in the link above. They use an inflatable air form, they inflate it and then spray polyuretane foam insulation on the inside walls of the air form, after that they put some armature and cover that with spray concrete. Simple and fast. We also wanted to try something like this, but could not find a company here that could make those inflatable air forms cheap enough. So the idea stuck for some time till I discovered the simple and elegant geodesic dome idea. There are many web sites online with geodesic dome howto's, diagrams and calculators. You simply get some wood bars, cut them to appropriate length and connect them together according to a diagram. The structure is very rigid and strong. It costs much less than an air form, is much stronger and does not need electricity and air pumps to keep it inflated constantly. A moderate V3 6m diameter dome can be assembled by 3 persons in about 2 hours, depending on the strut connector type. Here is our small test house geodesic dome skeleton and a small model in front of it:
We decided to combine the geodesic dome structure with the straw bale home idea. Using straw bales and clay as the walls. This is very cheap, easy and energy efficient. And this small hut is supposed to be a test house so that we can learn the process and make mistakes and learn. So far we have learned so much stuff what not to do Anyway. We dug out soil about 6m diameter and 0.5m deep, filled that hole with stones, gravel and sand. A perforated drain pipe was put underneath it all to drain the water out to the nearest ditch. On top of that we put the geodesic dome wooden structure with doors and began to cover that structure with straw bales:
recently I have been obsessed with dome homes, like the ones here:
Monolithic — Home of the Monolithic Dome
There are a number of advantages of this type of home compared to ordinary homes, you can read about that in the link above. They use an inflatable air form, they inflate it and then spray polyuretane foam insulation on the inside walls of the air form, after that they put some armature and cover that with spray concrete. Simple and fast. We also wanted to try something like this, but could not find a company here that could make those inflatable air forms cheap enough. So the idea stuck for some time till I discovered the simple and elegant geodesic dome idea. There are many web sites online with geodesic dome howto's, diagrams and calculators. You simply get some wood bars, cut them to appropriate length and connect them together according to a diagram. The structure is very rigid and strong. It costs much less than an air form, is much stronger and does not need electricity and air pumps to keep it inflated constantly. A moderate V3 6m diameter dome can be assembled by 3 persons in about 2 hours, depending on the strut connector type. Here is our small test house geodesic dome skeleton and a small model in front of it:
We decided to combine the geodesic dome structure with the straw bale home idea. Using straw bales and clay as the walls. This is very cheap, easy and energy efficient. And this small hut is supposed to be a test house so that we can learn the process and make mistakes and learn. So far we have learned so much stuff what not to do Anyway. We dug out soil about 6m diameter and 0.5m deep, filled that hole with stones, gravel and sand. A perforated drain pipe was put underneath it all to drain the water out to the nearest ditch. On top of that we put the geodesic dome wooden structure with doors and began to cover that structure with straw bales:
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