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Design of Straw Bale Buildings; The State of the Art

Design of Straw Bale Buildings; The State of the Art
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Design of Straw Bale Buildings; The State of the Art

 
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1429140

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For the first time, a design manual for practicing professionals, as well as teachers, is made available, drawing on the collective experience of the most senior and respected figures in the rapidly-emerging field of straw bale construction.

 
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Product Details
Author:Bruce King
Paperback:296 pages
Publisher:Green Building Press
Publication Date:September 15, 2006
Language:English
ISBN:0976491117
Product Length:10.72 inches
Product Width:8.28 inches
Product Height:0.75 inches
Product Weight:1.67 pounds
Package Length:10.6 inches
Package Width:8.2 inches
Package Height:0.7 inches
Package Weight:1.8 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 5 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.0 ( 5 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

27 of 27 found the following review helpful:


5straw bale Bible  Oct 17, 2006 By Fredric Lee McLaughlin "Architect"
For architects especially - dealing with technical issues and codes - and serious others as well, this is THE must-own first book to get on the intelligent, competent and wise use of straw bales in building construction. And do not forget the Art along the way. Editor/Engineer Bruce King and his team of top expert contributors make it all accessible, exciting and enticing to any adventurous designer considering use of this stimulating new/old material.

10 of 10 found the following review helpful:


5Read before you build he has done all the work for your P.E.  Apr 05, 2009 By S. Owens "owens73655"
You hand the book to your engineer and he will know what to do with it, the author has done all the home work for the engineer. This book is in a league all on it's on; it is the next generation in straw building. Your banker will stop laughing when he sees the book also. I am a lay man and it made perfect since to me; I have no idea where some of the other reviewers are coming from with there comments.

13 of 14 found the following review helpful:


2Not for the layman  Mar 25, 2008 By Robert Griffy "Griffy"
The information in the book was too detailed for the layman. This book is more for the architect and/or structual engineer or student of engineering and architecture. While I understood the concepts since I have already built a strawbale house as a layman it was way beyond what I would be look for in designing a straw bale house. I would recommend it to an architect who was going to design a straw bale house but not for the layman looking for ideas.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:


4Actual Useful Facts!  Jun 11, 2008 By Gary Anderson "P.E."
Most books of this sort are long on enthusiasm and short on useful information. As a professional engineer I now have just what Ineed to design a straw bale building in an earthquake zone.

11 of 17 found the following review helpful:


5Good, specific information  Mar 12, 2007 By Jerry P. Ferraccio
An excellent book for anyone interested in the specifics/codes/details of straw bale buildings, with special attention to moisture and structure.

I was a bit dismayed to find an admonishment to avoid designing parapets or "Santa Fe" style buildings, but I understand the advice. However, a web search yielded some suggestions on overcoming the disadvantage of zero-overhang inherit in parapet roofs. As I will be building in Santa Fe and want an adaptation of the parapet style, I will continue research on overcoming this disadvantage (I am not building a full parapet roof, but am using a parapet look to make a 360 degree balcony available to my master bedroom).

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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