Building with Cob: A Step-by-step Guide
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Average customer review:Product Description
The ancient method of cob building uses a simple mixture of clay sub-soil, aggregate, straw and water to create solid structural walls built without shuttering or forms, onto a stone plinth. It is now undergoing a renaissance as an 'eco-friendly' building material because of its amazing 'green' credentials. "Building with Cob" shows how to apply this ancient technique in a wide variety of contemporary situations, covering everything from design and siting, mixing, building walls, fireplaces, ovens and floors, lime and other natural finishes, and gaining planning permission and building regulation approval. It also explains in detail how to sensitively restore an old cob structure. This book is a step-by-step guide, lavishly illustrated with over 300 colour photos and 85 diagrams.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #96780 in Books
- Published on: 2006-02-21
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 256 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
In my work teaching natural building I often found myself using cookery metaphors. Clay plasters needs to be mixed to a consistency of cookie dough, clay slip needs to be like a runny yoghurt rather than milk, a good final cob should be like a loaf of bread... people relate to this much more than technical lists of mixes. It gives natural building a familiarity and a resonance that clicks with people, in the same way that Jamie Oliver on telly knocking a 2 minute chocolate mousse together does. The modern cook book is a very different thing from a Mrs Beaton first edition. Jamie Oliver, Nigella Lawson; the books produced by these celebrity chefs are awash with gorgeous pictures of delicious meals, groovy chefs at work, they make good food beautiful, everyday and relevant. Building with Cob is the latest addition to the cobbers library, and in many ways it has the feel of one of these cookbooks. The authors and the publisher are really to be congratulated on producing such a sumptuous book, lavishly illustrated with photos of cob that looks good enough to eat, and delicious curvy organic-looking houses. Cob has an indefinable quality that sets it apart as a building material. There is something about its monolithic undulating and gentle walls that touches people deeply. Having built a few cob structures, I feel deeply connected to this most ancient and yet most modern of building materials. I often tell apprentice cobbers on courses that they have a cobbing gene, and that once they become familiar with working with cob, they will find they know how to do it. It is instinctual. Adam Weisman and Katy Price travelled to Oregon in the US and trained in cob building with Linda Smiley and Ianto Evans of the Cob Cottage Company, authors, along with Michael G. Smith of the classic book The Hand Sculpted House . On their return to the UK they set about promoting the idea here, and through the company they set up, Cob in Cornwall, they have done just that. They have built a number of beautiful structures around the UK, some of which appear in this book. Like The Handsculpted House , this book is deeply passionate about cob and its potential, but it focuses less on the personal transformative qualities of working with it, and more on the practicalities of building with it. The book covers the history of earth building and the scale of its use around the world. They look at choosing a site, working out if you have suitable soils, and making mixes. Unlike the Handsculpted House which holds that the purest way of mixing cob is by foot on tarpaulins, this book takes a much more pragmatic approach. They take no strong position as to which is the best approach, although they do argue quite strongly that mixing cob in a cement mixer is a non starter (it tends to form balls and the straw doesn t get mixed in...). Every stage of the process is documented, from foundations through wall-raising to roofs, in a style that is easy to read, engaging and beautifully illustrated. They don t shy away from the fact that it is very hard work. Building with cob is an extremely rewarding and fun process. Make no bones about it, it is very physically demanding work, and you will be sure to sleep well at night after a day of cobbing. The best way to build with cob is with a team of people that you really enjoy being with, and who are not afraid to get dirty . --Rob Hopkins www.transitionculture.org
About the Author
Adam Weismann and Katy Bryce undertook an apprenticeship in natural building with the Cob Cottage Company in Oregon, USA. On their return to the UK they started their company ‘Cob in Cornwall’. They have built and restored many cob buildings including two-storey houses, small studios and garden rooms, outside courtyards and fireplaces, and earth ovens. In 2003 they won a ‘Pioneers to the Nation’ award from the Queen. They live in Manaccan, Cornwall.
Customer Reviews
This is an artful book!
I picked up this book when I was trying to understand what "cob" was. Little did I realize at the time that I would not only learn the answer to my question, but that I would become fully engaged in the step-by-step process, skill, beauty, art, and even spirituality of these earth structures. The authors have created a book that stimulates all the senses while at the same time being extremely practical. Simply stated, the book is a glorious experience.
Excellent Book- Beautiful and Practical
This book was hard for me to put down! I have been wanting to build my own eco house out of cob for years and this book has given me the confidence to have a go. The pictures and diagrams are not only clear but they are also beautiful. I highly reccommend this book.
Building with Cob
Building with Cob is a stunningly beautiful book! Photos and text not only give the reader a very clear and detailed lesson in building with cob, they also tell such a wonderful story of the authors' obvious love for their craft and for our shared world. Brilliant!!




