Meet the team that’s making cob legal, an interview with members of the Cob Research Institute: 133

Meet the team that’s making cob legal, an interview with members of the Cob Research Institute: 133

Today’s episode is very important in that there’s a limited window of time for those of you, especially in the USA who care about natural building and want to see cob and other natural building materials legalized and approved by building authorities to help this happen. An incredible opportunity is coming up in the last week of October, which is just over a week from now when members of the Cob Research Institute, some of whom you’ll hear interviewed in a minute, will present a proposal for cob to be included in the ICC/IRC code (international code council/international residential code, the governing body for building standards across the whole country). To gain approval, the proposal will be voted on and this is where you come in. This is your chance to call your local fire marshal or building inspector and voice your support that they vote to approve this measure which would allow legal permitted cob buildings in the USA. You might be new to natural building or you might think that you’d never want a cob house yourself, but if this proposal passes it’s likely to have a ripple effect for the approval of other earthen building materials and alternative building methods in the future for everyone. The guys from the CRI will give more details about how you can help to support this initiative, but if this is all you have time to listen to, just know that you can go to cobcode.org and get specific instructions on how to contact you local building official directly or to put them in contact with the CRI to help get out the vote on this potentially historic advancement for earthen and natural building. Don’t hesitate though. Like I mentioned, the vote will take place during the last week of October, this month, 2019! In this interview I got to speak to John Fordice, Martin Hammer, and Anthony Dente who have been working for years to compile the data and engineering properties of cob in order to better understand the material and write the proposal to have it approved as a legal building material in the US. Between them they answered a lot of questions about the advantages and limitations of cob, the tests and simulations they’ve done to get proper measurements of its performance and what they recommend to builders who are considering using cob to build their homes. It was such a pleasure for a natural building nerd like me to get to talk to these guys who’ve worked so hard to get verifiable information on the material that got me to fall in love with earthen building in the first place. Resources: Cob Research Institute’s website Get out the vote campaign and information

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(426)

Small-Scale Processing and Rural Micro-Industry panel

Small-Scale Processing and Rural Micro-Industry panel

Farm viability depends on much more than what happens in the field. While we often focus on production and farm management, many of the biggest challenges farmers face are shaped by what happens. Aft...

26 Kesä 51min

Undervalued biodiversity: Fostering overlooked lifeforms

Undervalued biodiversity: Fostering overlooked lifeforms

After the biodiversity panel from the last episode, I got to thinking about how protecting biodiversity is so often reduced to the life forms that humans value. The ones we find beautiful, friendly, o...

15 Kesä 1h 19min

Wildlife on farms: Challenges and benefits of coexistence

Wildlife on farms: Challenges and benefits of coexistence

This month we’re tackling the challenges and benefits of wildlife in all its forms. Wildlife and wild spaces are often spoken about as if they're at odds with the goals of farms. We often talk about b...

30 Touko 54min

Are carbon markets the best way to finance regenerative transition?

Are carbon markets the best way to finance regenerative transition?

It’s been over a year now since Climate Farmers let go of its Carbon credit program, and yet I know that many people who’ve been following our company don’t know the full story about how we got starte...

18 Touko 1h 9min

Farms as learning centers: workshops, research, and students

Farms as learning centers: workshops, research, and students

The only real way to learn and gain experience in farming is to get your hands dirty and put knowledge into practice. For that reason farms play an essential role in training others to get into this s...

5 Touko 53min

Academia and Farming: The disconnect and potential

Academia and Farming: The disconnect and potential

In today’s deep dive episode we’re taking on the behemoth of a topic that is the broken system and relationship between academic institutions and farmers on the ground. For a long time there was tra...

17 Huhti 1h 20min

From Waste to Wealth: Closing Loops on the Farm

From Waste to Wealth: Closing Loops on the Farm

In this panel session, we’re exploring one of the most practical and underused opportunities in regenerative farming and rural life: learning to see waste streams as life streams. Across farms and vil...

3 Huhti 59min

Measuring Regeneration: Beyond data and metrics

Measuring Regeneration: Beyond data and metrics

Welcome back everyone to the second of the Deep Dive episodes. In this new format the intention is to bring complexity back into the conversations around regenerative agriculture. Myself and many of m...

20 Maalis 1h 1min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
psykopodiaa-podcast
adhd-podi
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
kesken
rss-niinku-asia-on
aamukahvilla
rss-uskonto-on-tylsaa
rss-liian-kuuma-peruna
rss-hereilla
aamupore
puhutaan-koiraa
rss-rahamania
dear-ladies
rss-laadukasta-ensihoitoa
rss-narsisti
rss-arkea-ja-aurinkoa-podcast-espanjasta
rahapuhetta
rss-psykalab
rss-ihana-elamani