Small Timber Frame House Plans and Workshop

by Kent Griswold on March 13th, 2012. 5 Comments

Brian Liloia also known as Ziggy to his friends and well known for his cob house, which I have covered in the past here on the Tiny House Blog, is building a new home using a timber frame structure.

The house, code named Strawtron, is designed to be a passive solar, straw bale-insulated house using timber frame as the main structure.

The interior living area is 13 ft x 24ft which is about 300 square feet, it also has a loft and a green house area that is used to bring in passive solar heating.

Brian is making the small timber frame house plans available for free.

As a side note if you would like to help build this house Dancing Rabbit is offering a Natural Building Workshop in the summer of 2012. This includes two workshops one a Timber Frame Workshop and the second a Straw Bale Workshop. Only 12 spaces are available so click here to learn more and to apply.

P.S. Ziggy just sent me the full details so I am including them below.

Continue Reading »

Posted March 13th, 2012 by Kent Griswold and filed in Timber Frame
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5 Comments

Recipe for Building a Cob House

by Kent Griswold on August 23rd, 2009. 12 Comments

Over the past nine months we have been following Brian or Ziggy as his friends call him build his cob house. You can check out the last two posts on the build here and here.

Ziggy emailed me Friday night to tell me he has completed his home and moved in and has set up a page with a recipe for building a cob house on his blog. Here it is in a nut shell:

With $3000 for supplies and nine months of full time labor, Ziggy was able to build GOBCOBATRON, a small cob house with interior dimensions of roughly 15′x13′, and a footprint of (again, roughly) 20′x18′. Practically all of the labor was completed by hand (and foot!), including making and applying all of the cob.

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Here’s what Ziggy actually bought, and what he paid for in building supplies:

  • sand (just over 30 tons total) – $507
  • gravel (about 13 tons total) – $177
  • straw (16 bales) – $36 (most straw I used was free)
  • black walnut scrap lumber – $100
  • misc. lumber – $20
  • windows – $220 (two casement, one double hung window)
  • electrical – $28
  • galvanized wire – $30
  • nails – $100 (I couldn’t believe how expensive nails are)
  • raw linseed oil (for floor) – $72
  • EPDM pond liner $622
  • polycarbonate for skylight $400

and for the rocket stove:

  • firebricks – $70
  • flue pipe – $228

It’s true… you can build your own cob house with little money, but with lots of time and enthusiasm. There’s nothing quite like the experience of building your own home with little more than your hands.

Visit Ziggy’s blog for the complete story.

Thanks Ziggy for sharing your journey with us in building your cob house.

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by Kent Griswold (Tiny House Blog)

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Posted August 23rd, 2009 by Kent Griswold and filed in Earth/Cob, Tiny House Concept
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12 Comments