Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Village Building Convergence 2010

Welcome to the Village Building Convergence, a true gem about Portland and one of my personal favorite things about the city.

Each year, an organization called City Repair puts on a ten-day festival of community building and place-making, often using natural construction to do so. It's wonderful, 25 sites all across the city welcomed community members to join in playing in the mud while creating beautiful meaningful relationships and simple projects along the way. I was honored to be one of their guest instructors this year and participate in many of the activities throughout the week.

A cob bench from a previous year, being wholesomely enjoyed

An intersection painting, brings neighbors together in the street and helps slow down traffic with it's thoughtful design. There are many of these throughout Portland, how many have you seen?

A cat palace, built last year and led by my dear friend Eva Miller,

and this year she's building a Chicken Palace.
What lucky animals in the urban place!

She also led the renovation of the City's first legal Light Clay-Straw Retrofit.
And it came out great!

Here's a detail picture of the wall section for all you builder nerds

My awesome new friend Fezzo who was my housemate for the week.
and his bright red kilt that we dyed together mid-week.

This project was my favorite--an outdoor classroom at Madison High School. The timberframe and main cob walls had been built the previous year. Now we are adding strawbale ampitheater style seating and some bamboo and sculptural cob.

I have never seen as enthusiastic cobbers as here!
What a huge batch!

Rachel gets into it

Beautiful lime finishes from the prior year

Wetting down the top of the wall so that we can add to it this year. An amazing attribute of natural construction, that it is forever mendable and able to be rehydrated and continued.

Sebastian works on a bamboo detail.

Casey lays out the bale seats.

Then the seats are cover with slip and cobbed together, making it very strong.

We sculpt a sun at the center point of the top

Many, many people are involved with making it happen

Across town, at another project site, I lead a plaster workshop.


We are applying the final coat of plaster on a cob bench built the previous year.



Ellen has a great time finishing the project, she has put a lot of energy into the transformation of her backyard into a food forest sanctuary and community garden. She can't wait to enjoy using the bench!



So excited for next year, please check out www.cityrepair.org for more info, and see you there!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Cob Loop-de-Loop!

Welcome to the BRING Planet Improvement Center!
I'm building a piece for their sculpture park called the Garden of Earthly Delights.

It's a totally ground-breaking, never been done before that I know of, cob-adobe hybrid spiraling loop-de-loop... yes, all that and some.

the 'before' shot

Laying the urbanite foundation

with a gravel bed below and reclaimed chimney bricks every 8 feet. Something had to break up the 50' long curved bench. The gently curving part is intended for classroom style seating when BRING wants to host groups to learn about sustainability, salvage and using reclaimed materials.

A group of high school students spends their spring break getting muddy and learning about how to build with cob.

We finish most of the length of the bench that week.

Then, I begin the loop

Building up the plynths

more cob,
even solo

finally the bases are ready

and I start the adobe arch, using a 5 foot diameter plywood form

a new friend, Jessica Gray, helps out

making arches is a total blast!

More cob, fleshing out the structural adobe arch

More builder friends join in to help with the integral roof/bench surface. We're using toilet tank covers to protect the cob.

We debate it for a long while and decide to go with a salvaged steel armature to support the overhang of the toilet tank covers. It's totally great working at a salvage warehouse, all materials right on hand!

Eva Miller and I trim the form of the loop

Max and Fezzo work on the toilet tank extravaganza

Each piece is slightly sloped to the rear to drain.

We use cementitious mortar to set the porcelin

The toilet tank covers follow the form of the bench and spiral upwards

we have to get clever about how we will secure them up-side-down

It takes all four of us to get them to behave

Wired in and temporary strings help out too. Defying gravity is one of my favorite things...

Super hero pvc'ers to the rescue for the rafters, another great find at the warehouse

the roof for the loop gets framed with these, Max Edelson takes on that project

I teach a workshop on earthen plasters and have several wonderful folks join in on the finishing touches
Hooray!
Ethan Rainwater, the Garden Designer is happy with what we've created.

some finished shots, with two coats of linseed oil, this thing looks an awful lot like a chocolate frosted donut... complete with sprinkles!

my original sketch/rendering that I presented to get the gig

quite like I thought it would be!