Tag Archives: community

Vanuatu Earthbag Project Report

In an effort to prove that a simple earthbag roundhouse could be built entirely with unskilled and inexperienced labor we made a leap of faith.

We bought a block of land on the island of Efate in Vanuatu. We intended to build a women’s centre and hoped to inspire pacific islanders to recycle and build safe affordable Eco housing. This is not a charity or a religious venture. It just started with one Australian family wanting to help some friends in a nearby island.

Group photo of Vanuatu earthbag volunteers

Group photo of Vanuatu earthbag volunteers

On Friday the 22nd of March the first shovel hit the ground. By the afternoon a one metre deep graded trench had been hand dug around a 6 metre circle. Rock had been chipped away with pick axes and although it was grueling work everyone helped. We had more than 20 local men and women on site at a time using hand tools.

On Friday night we had a tropical downpour that lasted several hours. I was convinced that our trench was going to look like a donut shaped swimming pool but it didn’t retain one drop of water. Great land.

Saturday morning we lined the trench with geotec mat and laid the pierced drain pipe and coral crush in the trench and completed our French drain. That afternoon we traveled to the airport to collect Jeff and Steph two Americans traveling from Antarctica and Lauren an Australian lawyer. We bought our second hand flour bags from the bakery in Port Vila on the way back to the site.

Sunday morning we tamped the footings and cleared the land. This was done with shovels and buckets and a wheelbarrow. Jeff came on site and immediately showed his skills as team builder and organiser.

On Monday we double bagged and laid one row of coral crush in the trench.

Tuesday started with the first two rows of barbed wire around our first row of 40 bags. The work site was wonderful, two more rows of crush went up and then we stopped to put the door bucks in.

Wednesday we were joined by a French/Italian couple who are travelling through Vanuatu. We laid a plastic damp course and got our first row of earth on. The earth row was cheaper because we were single bagging but a little slower going. We got one row up on Wednesday and then the form was tamped into place top and sides until a nice uniform level shape was achieved. This took six men at a time in teams of two a couple of hours.

Earthbag women’s centre in Vanuatu

Earthbag women’s centre in Vanuatu

Everyday more and more people came to the site to see what we were doing and many of them joined in. We had local politicians and village girls and mothers and unemployed local labourers all working together with lawyer, sommelier, surfer, computer/logistics, jeweler, physiotherapist and many more skills on tap but no builders on site. Australians, Europeans, Americans, and Melanesian and Polynesian pacific islanders. Some filled and placed bags, some sorted the organic matter from the soil, some mixed the sand and soil and some barrowed the buckets of mixed earth to the bag layers.

At 12 every day women would walk out of the jungle carrying pots of food and jump off local buses with bags of fruit and we would stop and feast on papayas and avocados and lap lap and bananas poached in coconut milk and rice with chicken and corn. We drank fresh coconut water every few hours and there was a great team atmosphere. During lunch all the kids from the preschool gave each other wheelbarrow rides. Some ran around the circle of bags giving a little extra tamping.

People told us stories about selling off land in order to afford a block house and then losing it all in a cyclone. Some of the women walked more than two hours each way to come and work. I have never seen people so hungry to learn. Everyone expressed the dream and the intention to build one for their own family.

I was often quizzed about what charity my family were working for-what church we represented. I realise that we have such a culture now of letting charities handle our conscience that we forget it is possible to just find a community that needs help and help them with out all the paperwork and tax deductions. It was such a refreshing and joyful experience. When we let charities handle our kindness for us I think we get robbed of a little joy.

I was so sad to leave it at half height. After the Easter break, the work will continue and the walls should be completed by the end of the week. My family will return in July to feroscrete the thatch roof and plaster the inside of the building.

Jeff and Steph will be updating you on next week’s progress. They are working with a group of intelligent and resourceful people and I’m sure they will finish well.”

Update: “It looks like P&O cruises will be offering tours to their passengers in port Vila. They can spend a morning at the women’s centre being taught to make an earthbag and touring the building site. It seems they will actually make the process of building into a tourist attraction along with their traditional crafts. The centre is 5 minutes drive from the port so it is perfectly positioned for day trippers that want to pack a lot in.”

Update: “The P&O thing hasn’t been finalised yet but you can say that the women are doing bag building tours for cruise ship passengers. They have a couple of local tour bus drivers that pick passengers up at the port and bring them to the building as part of day tour of the island.”
Liz

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Vanuatu Earthbag Project Report is a post from: Natural Building Blog

Buy Local

Farmer’s markets and roadside food stands are on the increase for good reasons.

Farmer’s markets and roadside food stands are on the increase for good reasons.


This is another short post that will go right to the point – buy local. As obvious as this is, it’s good to be reminded of basic principles/truthisms from time to time. This post was sparked by a recent experience that I wanted to share. There’s a food stand on the highway about 2-3 blocks from us. We go past it every day. I noticed they had some rather unusual looking mangoes for sale, but never stopped for a close look. The other day my girlfriend bought some and said they were really good even though the peels are partially green. (Normally a sign they’re not ripe.) I wasn’t expecting much because they’re not nearly as perfect looking as commercially available mangoes, which are delicious. [I confess to being fooled by appearances.] The mango I tried was about half the size of store-bought. Little did I know I was in for the best mango of my life.

After cutting it open I knew right away it was going to be a treat. The fruit inside was a deep orange color, in contrast to pale yellow commercial mangoes, and quite aromatic. The flavor was rich and very sweet — absolutely the best mango ever for me. Needless to say we’ve stocked up on mangoes from this food stand. Not only are they the best tasting mangoes, they’re also far less expensive. They’re half the cost of supermarket mangoes, and one-third less than mangoes from farmer’s markets. Buying local means we’re getting fresh picked produce with all the nutrients intact. Produce is highly perishable and quickly loses nutrients. Who knows where the store-bought mangoes came from and how they were grown. Most everything is sprayed and grown with chemical fertilizers nowadays. And, think of all the energy wasted in transporting food from afar. Plus, we’re supporting our neighbors and keeping our money circulating in the community tax free. Buying locally means our neighbors, who we get to know better in the process, will be inclined to grow and sell more produce in the future. Same is true with buying building materials and other items if possible. We all benefit by being happier and healthier. Buying local is the right thing to do.

Image source: Godspace

Buy Local is a post from: Natural Building Blog

Small Space Design: A Societal Bridge

I found this project out of Italy working on  small space design and was intrigued by it. The difference between this project, dubbed the Freedom Room, and the slew of others out there: it was designed by prisoners.freedom room A training program was created through a collaboration with the research center Cibicworkshop and the research and design cooperative Comodo to provide the necessary tools to the prisoners of Spoleto, Italy’s correctional facility to create functional, beautiful and innovative small space design.

freedom room1 While their motivation is driven by forced small space accommodation the project is a reflection of far-reaching opportunities. The collaborators envision the rise of new social dynamics and innovative solutions to re-shaping communities and neighborhoods. That’s definitely in line with what I heard Jay Shafer speak about at a workshop last summer. It’s what many small space designers and tiny house builders are searching for. A shift in consciousness and the wider societal embrace of less is more.

freedom room2That such a project is coming out of a correctional facility really struck a cord with me. Prisons are places that are often tucked away and hidden from the daily life of citizens yet it’s impact and reflection on our society is poignant. That these inmates became the designers and project consultants of this prototype reflects innovation in design as well as social involvement and prison reform. 

Some of the issues that small space design is addressing includes inflated housing markets, high unemployment, increased underemployment, capitalist consumerism and the overt display of materialism of McMansions among other ills. Many folks interested in tiny houses can attest to this, including myself. The Freedom Room is a project design based on living under restraint but has shown what ingenuity born of necessity can initiate. It can be directed for use in the everyday life of people around the world and the collaborators hope that the project will serve as inspiration not only for other prisons but all manners of needs within society. It is another model expressing the simplicity and beauty that small space design is capable of achieving across the societal board-from inmates, to student dormitories, to hotel rooms to tiny living spaces.freedom room3

I find this project to be an inspiration in many ways.  As a prototype it addresses the major issues of decent living within penitentiaries and educational rehabilitation of inmates within the prison system. It reflects the viability of small space design in ways I’d never even considered. That somehow gives me hope that, eventually, more and more people will come around, give tiny living a try themselves, whether that means 100, 300, 500 or 1000 sq. feet, and perhaps consider reducing their footprint and finding the joy in simpler living. freedom room4

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