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This home was designed for a couple who were already living in a
passive solar home and believe in walking softly upon the earth.
For these reasons they had the conviction that their new passive
solar home should be built of straw.
Straw bale construction, as the term implies, utilizes the stacking
of straw bales to create adobe-like walls. The result is a thick-walled,
sound-proof, cozy home that is extremely well insulated. The advantages
of the technology - utilization of an otherwise unwanted agricultural
byproduct, reduced reliance on wood as a building material, and
superinsulation - are among the prerequisites for sustainability.
Passive solar and daylighting strategies, energy-efficient devices,
and a rooftop photovoltaic array allow the owners to live "off-the-grid".
The home is located in a forest clearing in the mountains north
of Santa Cruz. Its form is the confluence of the owner's lifestyle
with natural forces - our sun's annual cycle and daily traverse,
coastal morning fog, the topography of a ridge, the lay of a forest
clearing... This synthesis carries itself inside, where double-volumed
overlooks enliven the interior while facilitating heat-transfer,
and earth-toned concrete floors provide both hydronic heat and thermal
mass. At its edge are windows recessed into thick, sturdy walls
covered in real plaster; at its center, focal points of burgundy,
softly rounded corners, sacred niches carved for deities, serenity
and calm.
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