News Brief
Alternative Construction: Contemporary Natural Building Methods
Edited by Lynne Elizabeth and Cassandra
Adams, 2000. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
New York. Hardcover, 392 pages, $70.
Alternative Construction provides aterrific overview of various methods
for building with earth, straw, and
bamboo. With writings from over 30
authors—many of them experts or
innovators in the fields they describe—
Alternative Construction is an
enlightening, sometimes fascinating,
combination of voices. Despite some
unevenness of tone and a certain
amount of repetition, the book’s format
is enjoyable—somewhat akin,
as the editors point out, to attending
a conference on natural building
methods.
Alternative Construction provides a
terrific overview of various methods
for building with earth, straw, and
bamboo. With writings from over 30
authors—many of them experts or
innovators in the fields they describe—
Alternative Construction is an
enlightening, sometimes fascinating,
combination of voices. Despite some
unevenness of tone and a certain
amount of repetition, the book’s format
is enjoyable—somewhat akin,
as the editors point out, to attending
a conference on natural building
methods.
A chapter on materials contains information
on using earth as a finish
material. David Eisenberg, coauthor
of EBN’s recent feature article “Sustainability
and Building Codes” (see
Vol. 10, No. 9) contributed a chapter
on the same topic. A chapter on natural
conditioning addresses regionally
appropriate heating, cooling,
lighting, and ventilation strategies
that make sense with natural building.
The latter chapters consist of
case studies of a number of the methods.
While some of the material is repeated
from earlier chapters, these
case studies contain lots of realworld
information. The book concludes
with an epilogue on the place of
intangibles like spirit and soul in
building, followed by an extensive
list of recommended references and
resources.
Alternative Construction makes a
powerful argument for combining
the best of the industrial and non-industrial
worlds in the built environment.
It maintains that natural materials
can and are being integrated
with industrial materials and modern
engineering to reduce maintenance
and significantly enhance safety
(often characterized as major
drawbacks of some of these alternative
methods).
A theme repeated by a number of the
authors is that the use of these earth-
and straw-based systems by the affluent will help to remove the stigma
that traditional methods often bear
in poorer countries, where people
have abandoned these methods in
favor of modern ones that they perceive
as superior and indicative of
wealth and status. This is an important
consideration as the Earth’s
population continues to grow and
more people abandon traditional,
lower-impact technologies for the
resource- and energy-intensive methods
and materials of the industrialized
world.
Published October 1, 2001 Permalink Citation
(2001, October 1). Alternative Construction: Contemporary Natural Building Methods. Retrieved from https://www.buildinggreen.com/newsbrief/alternative-construction-contemporary-natural-building-methods
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