“THIS NEW GREEN HOUSE”

SEE HOW A HOUSE IS REALLY BUILT OUT OF STRAW THESE DAYS! DESIGNED FOR COMPLETE ENERGY EFFICIENCY, THESE STRAW BALE HOMES ARE IN CRESTONE, COLORADO, A SMALL TOWN JUST NORTH OF THE GREAT SAND DUNES NATIONAL PARK ,AT THE BASE OF THE SANGRE DE CHRISTO MOUNTAIN RANGE-AWESOME!

25 thoughts on ““THIS NEW GREEN HOUSE””

  1. Strawbale houses are fire resistant. They are covered with either an earthen plaster, or a lime plaster with clay often added. Many home owners in the fire lands of California are now applying earthen plasters to their conventional homes to make them fire resistant, as well as more energy efficient. It turns out natural materials have abundant benefits. Of course! I can’t wait to get to Crestone.

  2. This is really cool but I’m just wondering, wouldn’t the house be extremely flammable with all that hay? Especially if there is something wrong with the wiring (and it looks like the wiring is right against the hay bale).

  3. PLEASE DONT READ THIS. YOU WILL GET KISSED ON THE NEAREST POSSIBLE FRIDAY BY THE LOVE OF YOUR LIFE. TOMORROW WILL BE THE BEST DAY OF YOUR LIFE. HOWEVER IF YOU DONT POST THIS COMMENT something bad will happen. NOW UV STARTED READIN DIS DUNT STOP THIS IS SO SCARY. SEND THIS TO 5 VIDEOS IN 143 MINUTES WHEN UR DONE PRESS F6 AND UR CRUSHES NAME WILL APPEAR ON THE SCREEN IN BIG LETTERS. THIS IS SO SCARY CAUSE IT ACTUALLY WORKS THIS ACTUALLY WORKS

  4. I like this video and admire the concept, but could do without the migraine inducing background music.

  5. Maybe one main wall could be made of bales. Otherwise this would take up entirely too much livable space, and would require a much larger structure.

  6. Use less wood – use stabilized mud blocks or bamboo instead – it is amazing what one can do with mud blocks and bamboo. Bamboo is a renewable resource and stabilized mud-blocks can come from the basement of your home.

  7. I suppose you are technically correct, but it takes millions upon millions of years for oil to be formed from dead vegetation, unless of course you believe that the earth is only 10,000 years old.

  8. ResearchKnowledge123

    They should use more straw on the interior walls. I saw alot of stick framing inside this house. They should push the envelope further. Try to use the least amount of wood as possible. IMO

  9. It depends on how fast we use it and how fast the oil is created by nature. The oil fields in alaska and mexico are drying up. The production is slowly going down and has been for years.

  10. I like the idea of a strawbale home with solar and
    wind power,also water treatment systems of an earthship.

  11. @Postitman64
    Lol, yea we just gotta wait a couple million years before the carbon turns into oil.

  12. lol our population is growing very fast and big. that why we need to stop it and cars,light,etc is a big waste of oil. nature cant produce enough oil for human use and it make carbon dioxide!

  13. I come from the farm too, and know of straw bales left in lofts that are decades old. Sealed as they are in plaster, without oxygen, they’ll last much longer. Straw decomposes in moist environments. That is the goal of a good builder, to keep that from ever happening.

  14. The insulation value of side vs. ends is arguable – sideways is thicker, but the orientation of the straw allows some air movement sideways in the wall, negating the benefits. basically, it’s preference depending on your construction methods. Some people have equipment to make the plaster application easier, but that is another debate as to which is better.

  15. While costing about the same as a traditional stick built house, the life cost (heating/cooling/maintenance) is between 35 and 70% of a traditional building. Properly built, moisture is not a problem. Sufficient overhangs are very important for protecting the wall and minimizing solar gain in the summer months. Termites have been known to eat the wood framing and leave the straw. I’ve not heard of termites eating the straw. There is a wealth of information available – I have a large stack myself

  16. There is a mansion built in Alabama (quite a moist environment) that has lasted 80 years. Termites don’t eat straw. Straw won’t burn in a compacted state – it needs oxygen. There have been tests where they blast a natural gas flame on a strawbale wall and heats the plaster to red hot – only blackened the bales 1-2 inches in. I have done extensive research into this in college – it is essentially fireproof, does well exposed to hurricane force winds, earthquakes.

  17. plus it worries me to see all that electrical stuff right up against the straw..what if u have a short or electrical fire? And since your roof is mainly sitting on your walls..that whole roof could cave..I think id like my house made out of cinderblocks and rebar..still keeps temps constant and the rebar would withstand a tornado or strong winds..which we get here alot in spring…each to his own..but i would think this kind is only good in dry hot climates.

  18. @pyogazel..well let me tell u, where i live there is rain, rain somehow manages to get inside walls in time, maybe from cracks, etc..also we have this insect called termites..they love to eat paper, cardboard, or anything easier to eat than wood which all know they eat also and destroy wood in homes…straw would definitely attract them..they live in the ground as I have found them even in my container garden breeding in the soil..plaster/clay cracks..thats all it takes for termites to enter.

  19. In order to compost you need water and micro-organisms. If the straw is kept perfectly dry and isolated from the soil, micro organisms can’t get to it and compost it.

    You have your answer :o)

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