Category — Notes
Successful earthquake test of straw bale house
Source: News release from University of Nevada, Reno, 02 April 2009
It huffed and puffed, but the 82-ton-force, earthquake-simulation shake table could not knock down the straw house designed and built by University of Nevada, Reno alumna and civil engineer Darcey Donovan.
The full-scale, 14-by-14-foot straw house, complete with gravel foundation and clay plaster walls, the way she builds them in Pakistan, was subjected to 200 percent more acceleration/shaking than was recorded at the 1994 Northridge, Calif. earthquake, the largest measured ground acceleration in the world. After a series of seven increasingly forceful tests, in the final powerful test the house shook and swayed violently, cracked at the seams and sent out a small cloud of dust and straw…and remained standing.
Donovan oversaw the successful series of seismic tests run March 27 at the University’s world-renowned Large-Scale Structures Laboratory. She was testing her innovative design for straw bale houses she has been building since 2006 throughout the northwest frontier provinces of Pakistan, in the foothills of the Himalayas between Pakistani tribal areas and Kashmir. Her design uses bales as structural and load-bearing components rather than just insulation as in other straw-bale designs.
“We’re very pleased with the results,” said Donovan, founder/CEO of the non-profit Pakistan Straw Bale and Appropriate Building (PAKSBAB) organization. “The house performed exceptionally well and survived 0.82g (0.82 times the acceleration of gravity) and twice the acceleration of the Northridge quake. The Geological Survey of Pakistan estimates the 2005 Kashmir earthquake to have had peak ground accelerations in the range of 0.3 to 0.6g.
Most people were killed and injured in that October 2005 earthquake as they slept when their poorly built houses collapsed on top of them. The magnitude 7.6 earthquake killed 100,000 people and left 3.3 million homeless or living in tents.
“Our goal is to get the largest number of poor people into earthquake-safe homes. We want to make it as affordable as possible so they build a safe home. We want to save lives.”
“Straw bale houses are used around the world, but those have posts and beams for support and rely on energy-intensive materials, skilled labor and complex machinery, making it unaffordable for the poor,” Donovan said. “In our design, the straw bales are the support, and not just for insulation. Our design is half the cost of conventional earthquake-safe construction in Pakistan. The materials we use — clay soil, straw and gravel — are readily available; and we utilize unskilled labor in the construction.
“We build a small, steel compression box, pack it with straw, which is readily available from the Punjab District, literally stomp on it to compress it, add a little more, stomp on it a little more, and then finally use standard farm-type hand jacks to do the final compressing of the bales,” Donovan said.
The site-fabricated bales are not as wide as those used in a typical straw bale building, and the fishing-net reinforcement and gravel-bag foundation are nonconventional.
“We fill old vegetable sacks with gravel, like sandbags, for the foundation. The bags are fully encased, or boxed, in a mortar made from clay soil and cement. It’s as low-tech as possible using indigenous, affordable materials,” she said. The earthquake-safe buildings are 80 percent more energy efficient than modern conventional buildings at 50 percent of the cost. Her group also trains local residents how to build the homes.
“Our system is different than anything ever tested,” she said. “We’re doing seismic research on the house to have data to show its structural integrity.” While there are no building codes in the region, Donovan and the organization she founded, PAKSBAB, are pursuing an endorsement from Pakistan’s newly formed Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority.
Scientists will analyze the seismic-testing results, and Donovan will write a detailed report and seismic design and construction recommendations to be published in the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute’s World Housing Encyclopedia.
Donovan has been a practicing engineer since 1986. She has a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering from Stanford University, a master of science in civil engineering from the University of Nevada, Reno, and is a licensed Professional Civil Engineer.
The research was conducted at the National Science Foundation’s George E. Brown, Jr. Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation Consortium, Inc. (NEES) shake-table site at the University of Nevada, Reno as a NEES Management, Operations and Maintenance award shared-use project.
“I am extremely grateful to EERI, NEES and UNR for their generous support, and to all the hardworking volunteers who dedicated countless hours to this project, Donovan said.
The non-profit PAKSBAB relies on donations and grants to continue its work. For more project information, visit www.paksbab.org.
The University earthquake simulation facility is managed as a national shared-use NEES equipment site created and funded by the National Science Foundation to provide new earthquake engineering research testing capabilities for large structural systems. This NEES equipment site is connected to the NEES Consortium of 15 other universities and the shared-use access and training is coordinated through the collaboratory.
The National Science Foundation created NEES to give researchers the tools to learn how earthquakes impact the buildings, bridges, utility systems and other critical components of today’s society.
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April 6, 2009 1 Comment
Henry Wiersma’s rebuilding brick by brick
Many of you have met Henry Wiersma and his amazing earth block machine and heard about the fire on his property a couple of years ago.
Northumberland Today has published an article, Dream built brick by brick, about Henry Wiersma’s construction project using unfired brick and straw bale.
An excerpt:
At present, he is building a house with unfired clay bricks — bricks made of the sticky Northumberland clay that sits just under the surface around most new home foundations. Think of it as adobe brick technology Canuck-style. Wiersma claims he is the only one in Canada attempting to build a home with unfired clay bricks.
The clay has been dug up, pulverized and screened on location. With a bit of cement added, the clay has been compacted into 10×14x4-inch bricks. Wiersma uses a clay and water mixture as a mortar between the blocks.
…
Surrounding the 10-inch clay brick walls will be an 18-inch straw bale wall. A plaster finish will cover the home’s exterior and a surrounding porch will provide further protection from the elements.
Elsewhere in the article, Henry’s passion for sustainable living, localization and move towards a post-industrial way of live comes through loud and clear.
March 3, 2009 No Comments
Green Building Festival call for presentation proposals
With the world economy slowing, many new building projects have been postponed or canceled. By necessity, the focus in the sustainable building world will shift to existing buildings, communities and sites. There exists a great opportunity to reduce our ecological footprint by improving what we have. By upgrading the underperforming built environment that we already inhabit, we can make vast reductions in carbon, greenhouse gases and energy demand.
The Green Building Festival is pleased to announce our 5th Anniversary theme: RE.
Renovating, regenerating, rebuilding, remaking, retrofitting, recycling, reusing, reimagining. Or suggest your own RE. They are currently welcoming presentation proposals that address our theme. The deadline is Friday, March 20th. The proposal should be concise (1 to 3 paragraphs), include images if possible, and address the challenge of taking what we already have and making it exemplary. Please include contact information, Speaker Name and Bio.
Presentation Proposals should be submitted by email to Jeff at Sustainable Buildings Canada: [email protected]
For more information visit www.sbcanada.org
February 25, 2009 Comments Off
Building science for straw bale buildings
John Straube, über award-winning Big Head in the building science world has published an overview of the science behind straw bale buildings over at BuildingScience.com.
John shares the Big Head award with Bruce King, editor of the definitive handbook of technical strawbale design, Design of Strawbale Buildings, available from Green Building Press.
February 23, 2009 1 Comment