Blowhard, Esq. writes:
Cob is an earth-base building material comprising subsoil, clay, sand, and gravel, which is mixed with straw and water to a stiff but malleable mass and used to build the walls of a house and numerous items within it, including shelves, benches, floors, and ovens.
…
Cob building has many advantages: the cob walls, when dry, are extremely hard and will last for centuries; they can be shaped to any required form using a sharp spade or mattock; cob is load-bearing, so cob houses need no wood framework. The only disadvantage is that because the building process involves various stages, the total construction time may be as much as fifteen months.
– Building Without Architects: A Global Guide to Everyday Architecture
Adobe?
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Basically. It’s the local variation.
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It’s strange that in Arizona there is so little adobe used. But the reason seems to be labor costs, which would be high with a cob house as well. Amortized over the life of the building it’s probably very cost effective, but who thinks that way now?
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Building technologies come in packages: electricity, plumbing, doors and windows. floors, etc. How do you install an electricity outlet in a mud wall?
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A friend who grew up in a house with a thatched roof mentioned that, if you’re going to have a thatched roof, you should probably have a cat, too.
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Yeah, I’ve heard thatched roofs are a breeding ground for vermin. In the last picture in the gallery I posted is of a modern cob house, one built recently. I wonder if the thatch is more decorative than functional.
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