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New Communitarian Technology ideas

 

Compost Cabin

(1976)

The cabin's basic shape can be any of the existing single room configurations. Large house dimensions can be obtained by joining room units together. The only modification of design needed to change any single room cabin or house into a compost cabin is the in the structure of the lower walls and the method of insulating the upper walls and roof.

The lower walls are expanded to make compost bins four feet wide and four feet high with the top inside quarter of the bins forming the interior bottom walls of the cabin. Above the compost bin walls the regular walls are kept hollow forming a clear 4 o 6 inch clear air passage in the walls that allows escaping warm air rising off the composting material to circulate through the upper walls to the roof (which is also hollow) and there out through an exhaust vent.

Here's how the design becomes nearly energy self-sufficient with practically no cost for heating. In the Fall, leaves, grass clippings, green hay, are gathered together and put into the compost bin walls of the cabin. Within the compost bin walls decomposition of the green vegetable matter begins and through this process heat is generated (up to 100 degrees) and radiates outward.

The outside walls of the compost bins are insulated with reflective material so that the compost heat is reflected inward. The green compost doesn't have a disagreeable odor and there are abundant sources for it in the Fall season. Green compost heats the cabin in the Fall, Winter and Spring. As temperatures rise in the Spring and Summer, compost material can be removed from the bins.

In Summer, the empty compost wall bins and hollow upper walls help keep the cabin interior cool by circulating cool air from underneath the through the compost bins and upper walls creating another temperature barrier to the outside. Additional cooling may be obtained by placing open water filled containers inside the compost bin walls. Air rising from underneath the cabin would be further cooled by circulating over these water filled cans as it travels upward to the roof and out the vent. As Summer changes into Fall the cycle is repeated.

The advantages of this type of heating and cooling design over conventional ones including solar heating are these: Simplicity of design. No advanced technology needed. No need for a south-facing homesite. No need to worry about the number of sunlit days thus making this house design ideal for most temperate climates which receive heavy cloud cover during the winter months.

 

Alternative Building techniques

 

Sandbag construction over aluminum Quonset-type shell: sandbags piled against sides of metal building to insulate it and, with vegetation cover, provide a pleasing nestled in the ground home.

quonset earth-covered.jpg (117379 bytes)         Hobbit_Home.jpg (28299 bytes)

10-33-Worlds-Top-Strangest-Buildings-woodland.jpg (99934 bytes)

 

Sandcastle construction method:

plastic foam filled concrete that is pumped up to a high spout to be poured out over a house frame made of re-bar and wire mesh to produce a finished Ferro-cement structure. The technique is like one made sandcastles as a kid by pouring liquid sand to build up the castle structure. It produces a dripped candle look and if the concrete were colored with concrete paint the effect would be quite beautiful.*

       * See the Chateau Marmoset page for an example of how Spanish architect Antonio Gaudi made organic brick and mortar columns.

 

Living panels of greenery for building walls. Pretty, easy to care for, oxygen-producing walls.

       

 Some new transportation ideas for consideration..

 

Nerf Cars (1976)

       Foam plastic bodies for cars that will decrease injuries in auto accidents. The foam is softest on the outside while the interior side is of hard Teflon-type plastic to hold the engine and running gear.

 

Solar Blimps (1976)

       Clear transparent plastic top half of blimp balloon body with dark solar panel imbedded bottom half. The clear plastic lets sunlight in to heat the interior air of   the ship while the solar panels provide electricity to run electric propeller motors.

 

And just for fun...The Harmonica Airplane: (1978)

       Airplane with harmonica or organ type openings in the wings that produce music as the air passes through. Pilot can be the musician or the music could be preprogrammed like a player piano. Sky music!

 

 

 

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