In
the coming months, I will be adding a cob building tutorial here, one
chapter per week (more or less!) as time permits. Once the tutorial is
completed, it will be available online or in book form on this
website.
Earth
is probably still the world's most common building material. Cob
building is the art of building homes using earth materials. Usually
when I tell someone about cob for the first time, they think 'corn
cobs.' That's not what it's really about. The word
'cob' comes from an old English word that means 'a rounded lump or
mass.' We get our modern word 'gob' from the same root word. Cob is
basically a mixture of straw, sand and clay. Once the walls are built
(by stacking the cob balls or lumps to build walls) they are covered with plaster to
seal them. There are no forms, brick shapes or frames. Since cob is
basically the same consistency as modeling clay, it lends itself to
organic shapes that are more curved and natural. Cob can also be used to build sculpture, garden walls and
outdoor ovens.
Cob is literally 'dirt cheap' since it is made
from materials readily found in nature. It
can also be sculpted to provide beautiful artistic touches to your home,
as these pictures illustrate. Not only that, but it's so easy a child
could do it. Ever make mud pies when you were a kid? Then you've already
got most of the basic skills to build with cob! In fact, as a child
growing up on the farm back in the late 1960s and early 1970s, I built
play forts with cob before I even knew what it was called. Cob is almost
instinctive.
Cob has been around for thousands of years. Some
of the earliest structures on Earth, in the Mesopotamian region, were
made of a type of cob. There are cob homes in Western Europe that have
been continuously occupied for centuries. With a little regular
maintenance, a cob home is extremely durable.
Cob
is also non-toxic. It is made from natural materials that contain no
toxins. Cob doesn't require any products that don't come directly from
the Earth. This ancient way of building also doesn't contribute to
deforestation, mining or pollution. Since it is a natural form of
building, it does not rely on manufactured materials. Since it is made
using materials on the building site, it doesn't use fossil fuels
transporting materials to the site.
One drawback of working with cob is that many
building inspectors are unfamiliar with the material. Cob is not covered
by most building codes; however, adobe is covered in many. If you can
convince your local building inspector that
cob is a modified form of adobe, you may have better luck in getting
your project approved. Another drawback is with insurance companies.
Most won't insure cob because they have no experience with the material.
There's some tradeoff in this department. You might not be able to get
the building insured, but since cob is so durable and cheap, in the
unlikely event that a disaster occurs and damages your building, it can
be rebuilt for about the same amount of money that you would have spent
on insurance premiums. If this is really a concern for you,
consider the fact that cob itself is fireproof and extremely durable.
For a story of about how her first cob studio survived a hurricane,
visit Christina Ott's Barefoot
Builder website.
If
you are having problems with the local building inspector, this can usually
be worked around by finding an architect or an engineer who has
experience working with cob. If you can get an architect to sign off on
your project, most building inspectors will work with you. I'm
starting a list of architects and engineers who work with natural
materials. If you are such an architect, or you can recommend one,
please email me and I'll add
their name to the list.
About the pictures in this
tutorial: Not all of the cob structures in the pictures shown here
were built by the Culture Artist Cobbers. Many are from cobbers at various
sites around the world. I have attempted to get permission for all the
photos used on this site, and to properly credit them wherever possible.
When the cobbers in question have a website, I have tried to link the
picture back to their site, or list them in the Cob
Builders' Directory, or both. I have made every effort to gain
permission for all the pictures shown. If I inadvertently used one without
permission, please contact me at chuck@cultureartist.org
and I will either credit the source or remove it. Thanks!