building (454)

Stone Masonry Publications

Lloyd, hello. I’m Tomas Lipps, used to live in Bolinas late ’70s, early ’80s… I was pleased to stumble upon your blog today and have enjoyed browsing through it. One line in particular struck me [referring to the book Shelter]: “We were both fans of Life Magazine, and felt that each two-page spread should stand alone and be visually balanced.” That’s because I’ve gotten into publishing myself. I edit a glossy print publication called STONEXUS Magazine and a digital counterpart to it called the STONEZINE, and in the print mag I’m particularly sensitive to how the two-page spreads are laid out. (The ‘zine is single-page, 8.5″ × 14″.)

Good to see you’re still at it, and out and about. I’ve been confined here in Santa Fe due to the damn pandemic, but as soon as I get issue #XX printed and mailed out (April), I’ll go off on the trip I had planned in 2020 — to Sardinia. Will be photographing stonework there, the Bronze Age Nuraghi in particular fascinate me. You seem to be familiar with Italy, anything you can tell me about Sardinia?

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Yogan’s 40-Foot-Tall Half-Timber Tower in France

From our good friend yogan, a highly skilled and innovative carpenter in France:


Our last job!

A big tower in colombage (Middle Ages technique of half-timber framing).

We sawed the wood with a mobile horizontal bandsaw, then drew an outline of the entire tower on the floor of our workshop; we then laid the wood on the markings to draw the assemblage.

Only tenons and mortises! No nails or bolts.

It’s a 4.5 × 4.5 × 12 meter (15 by 15 by 40 feet) tower (without the rock foundation).

8.7m3 (94 sq. ft.) of oak and chestnut was used. Almost 18m3 (194 sq. ft.) of uncut logs.

The roof and the walls will be finished this year!

www.cabanophiles.com
yogan.over-blog.com
facebook.com/mryogan
instagram.com/yogancarpenter

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More on Greg Ryan’s Trusses

The 20-by-30-foot truss structure at the Turtle Island Children’s Center in Montpelier. Photo courtesy of Turtle Island Children’s Center

Nine outdoor classrooms designed specifically for the pandemic have been installed at schools in central Vermont, thanks to a Rochester family.

Dubbed the RyanTruss, each structure is basically a series of wooden trusses topped with a corrugated fiberglass roof. Trusses are the frames traditionally employed to support a roof.

After hearing about the need for outdoor classrooms from a teacher at the Stockbridge Central School, Greg Ryan designed a structure that would be relatively cheap and easy to assemble. Ryan, who is currently riding out the winter in New Mexico, has built tiny houses and unconventional buildings.

“I have been intrigued by how strong something could be while still being incredibly light,” said the 52-year-old builder and musician.…

This article sent us by Jon Kalish.

See earlier post on the Ryan Truss here: lloydkahn.com/lightweight-inexpensive-quick-to-build-structures

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Gravity-Powered Shingle Shuttle

I’m going to put on a new roof soon, working by myself. Hardest part is getting the shingles up on the roof. I’m building a gable patio roof at the same time so I don’t want to rent a lift several times to load different roof areas as it progresses. While doing a search for info I came across this:

–Lew Lewandowski

A little blurry, but you get the idea. I’ve asked Lew to send us a video of his version.
Bundles of asphalt shingles are heavy!

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Raised from Earth

Under the gaze of southern Arizona’s cinnamon-hued Canelo Hills, a mother shares ancient building traditions with her three sons. In Puebloan creation stories, adobe structures, like people, emerge from the earth and return to the earth. For Athena Steen, it’s the family memories, skills, knowledge, love, laughter — and the clay itself — that endure.

All clay, rock, and standing dead timber harvests in this film conducted in accordance with the rules of local jurisdictions.

Also, see: www.caneloproject.com/photos

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Travis Skinner’s Unique Anglerfish Sauna

Travis Skinner, whose 400-square-foot small home was featured in our book Small Homes (pp. 52–53), has written a book about his unique wood-fired sauna on wheels. The book is called AnglerFish Sauna: Material Based Design & Deep-Sea Sculpture, and is available at:

amazon.com/dp/1737637502

In his introduction, Travis says: “What inspired us to make a 17-foot model of a female Anglerfish that is a wood-fired sauna on wheels? These pages will lead you on a multimedia journey through the conceptual design, the process of construction, and meaning within the sculpture.”

The sauna is beautiful, exceptional, and I’ve never seen anything quite like it. It’s also built with meticulous craftsmanship.

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Fanjingshan Skytop Buddhist Temples in Southeastern China

China’s Guizhou province peering over at Mount Fanjing. Rising more than 100 meters above the surrounding landscape, visitors will need to climb almost 9,000 steps to reach the summit. Look closely at the image and you can see how the stairs wind up and around stone outcroppings and through a gorge.

The buildings you see perched at the top are two Buddhist temples — the Temple of the Buddha and the Temple of Maitreya — linked by a small footbridge.

Located in Tongren, Guizhou province, southeastern China, the highest peak of the Wuling Mountains, at 8,430 feet.

www.peapix.com/bing

More info: www.chinadiscovery.com/guizhou/fanjingshan/fanjingshan-temple.html

From Lew Lewandowski

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Shed Covered with Giant Slabs of Slate in Wales

Hi Lloyd.

I thought you might be interested in this small shed, alone in a field up the valley from my home in Southern Snowdonia, Wales. We’re in an area of old slate mining which began in the mid-19th century. and finished maybe 30-40 years ago. The slate slabs on this small outbuilding are between one and two inches thick.

Cheers, and all the very best to you from Corris, Wales.

–Neil Heath

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Lightweight, Inexpensive, Quick-to-Build Structures

I got an Instagram message from Greg Ryan last week, and got him to write up this unique project:

I was trying to design a structure that could be used as an outdoor classroom space during Covid. I wanted it to be inexpensive and simple to build, to cover maximum space with minimal materials and something that would lend itself to community builds (or ‘unskilled labor’).

I was inspired by the usual suspects … Frei Otto, Buckminster Fuller, Amory Lovins, as well as my brother’s interest in ultralight aircraft design and how strong something could be while being very light and using minimal materials. I was also inspired by Bill Coperthwaite’s yurts and the outward leaning walls that create a built-in seat or bench back. The aesthetic draws on architecture found in Vermont, including covered bridges and barns.

I wanted something that could be built with minimal materials that were readily available, could be built in a shop and assembled quickly on site. Strong enough to survive Vermont winters, handle heavy snow loads, and strong winds. The resulting structure is extremely strong (as it is composed primarily of triangles), easy to assemble, and uses minimal materials.

The end result is a structure that looks modern, but also fits in with the traditional architecture of New England. Although the structures were originally designed to be outdoor classrooms, people are finding many uses for them, including shop space, lumber drying, boat houses, second garages, backyard covered decks, etc. A unique feature of the “RyanTruss” is that the entire building is laid out on a single template. This template is also a drill guide. The idea being that a community group could get together and build one of these with basic cordless tools.

In practice, this has proven a little more difficult than that, though we keep getting closer.

Over the past year, my sons Aidan and Casey have built over a dozen RyanTrusses and have worked to refine the building process as well as honing in on the best ways to assemble the structures onsite.

www.gregryan.us
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