Greenhouse


William Cleaver will be joining us at Factor e Farm on May 1 for a Dedicated Project Visit. He’s coming from across the big pond – from the United Kingdom – and we are planning for a 3 month stay.

William is not a novice to creative dexterity – he’s involved in repair and demolition of industrial chimney stacks and natural draught cooling towers – at heights. See for yourself:

He has experience with various tools, welding brickwork, ropework, woodwork, and general shop.  He’s traveled the world, studied Romance languages, taught English in Chile, and is certified to teach high ropes courses. He is now showing great interest in the deeper message of post-scarcity, resilient community creation.

We discussed the following tentative plan, with both of us working in the shop and as needed:

May – Work on finishing or building Sawmill/LifeTrac II/MicroTrac II/ anciliary implements for construction – all in preparation for building.

June – begin building autonomous, zero energy housing with solar space. Experiment with CEB floors, CEB masonry stove and chimney, stabilized bricks, stabilized reject lime bricks, stabilized brick walkway and driveway, stabilized retaining walls, and others. We plan on winter food garden and sprouting in the solar space. If progress on the steam engine goes well, we’ll aim to install combined heat and power on the masonry stove.

July – continue building until comfortable accommodations for the winter are ready for several people.

We’re looking at building zero energy homes that look tentatively like this:

(Credits: Aigars Bruvelis in Blender)

Here is a CEB floor example from Abe at Vela Creations:

See more of his photos here.

Other than this, William is learning Kdenlive on Linux for movie editing, as well as and QCad for CAD work. These are staple tools now at Factor e Farm. William will begin preparing some of the technical drawings for the sawmill, so we can collaborate on making that happen over distance until his arrival.

We do want to consider bringing in additional help from the CEB general contractor, Floyd (see last blog post). We will consider hosting a CEB workshop if progress is good. If the CEB fabrication is going well – there could be resources generated to really get things moving forward, and continue to build more structures. I think now is the beginning of really settling into the land – and getting the place to look half-way presentable. We’re open to all kinds of ideas, such as the proposed CEB vault construction and others – but we’d need other people to get involved to push those projects forward. Otherwise, we’re sticking to basics and all types of experiments in the process.

Categories: Biotecture, CAD, Compressed Earth Block Press, Dedicated Project Visits, Factor e Farm, Factor e Team, Global Village Construction Set, Greenhouse, Infrastructure, LifeTrac, MicroTrac, Natural Building, Open Collaboration, Open Everything, Open Source Sawmill, People, Permafacture, Post-scarcity, Power Cube, Solar Village 2010, Steam Engine Construction Set, Viral Village, Winter Gardening, Workshops

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This past week we put on the roof for the cordwood building addition:

Yesterday I returned to the CEB. On November 26, we produced the first brick. I got right back into it – beginning work on the automated hopper assembly – which will allow 3-5 bricks to be made each minute.

This is the table for the hopper assembly:

Now we need to fabricate the hopper assembly, and add a second hydraulic cylinder to move the hopper assembly back and forth. Items to address include friction wear of the hopper, alignment, and structural integrity of the completed machine. Friction wear is addressed by using Nylon 6/6 liner, alignment is assured by working carefully, and structural integrity may be addressed by welding on stop blocks, if necessary. So far, no structural fatigue was visible anywhere – but that was after pressing only a single brick.

I aim to finish the hopper assembly as early as by Wednesday of next week. This time, we’ll have to dig through the snow to collect some soil for testing. In the greenhouse, it’s warm with the stove, and quite a pleasant working environment, with some red peppers crop:

Categories: Compressed Earth Block Press, Greenhouse

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