Bathurst Workshop Progress

Form a Tube in ready for the 65mm. rubble to be back filled tomorrow.

Formatube In

Formatube In

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Bathurst Workshop Preparations

We are under way!

Our client Geraldine has started digging the rubble trench footings in preparation for the 1st. straw bale pod.

It's a square
Pavilion 1 is a square building 6m. x 6m. plus a front verandah
First Trench Goes IN!
First Trench Goes IN!

More news and photos as we progress.

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Bathurst Council and Sustainability

Grats to Bathurst Council for their observance of Environmental issues.  Check their website for info on their roles and achievments, good environmental stuff.

Welcome to the environment section of Bathurst Regional Council’s website.  These pages will provide you with information on Council’s role in protecting and enhancing this unique natural environment.  Council is actively involved in protecting the integrity of its natural surroundings, and is committed to assist in protecting the environment that we all share.  Since the amalgamation of Bathurst City and Evans Shire Councils, the environment now managed by Council includes habitats for the Copper Wing Butterfly and the Koala in addition to endangered plants such as Zieria Obcordata.

Bathurst Council Website

Bathurst Council Website

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Straw, the flexible alternative

Most of us of course have a working knowledge of what straw actually is, to give an appreciation of short list of some uses for straw, just take a peek at the follwing list, handy if you have some left over from your latest straw bale construction project!
* Biofuels
o The use of straw as a carbon-neutral energy source is increasing rapidly, especially for biobutanol.

* Biomass
o The use of straw in large-scale biomass power plants is becoming mainstream in the EU, with several facilities already online. The straw is either used directly in the form of bales, or densified into pellets which allows for the feedstock to be transported over longer distances. Finally, torrefaction of straw with pelletisation is gaining attention, because it increases the energy density of the resource, making it possible to transport it still further. This processing step also makes storage much easier, because torrefied straw pellets are hydrophobic. Torrefied straw in the form of pellets can be directly co-fired with coal or natural gas at very high rates and make use of the processing infrastructures at existing coal and gas plants. Because the torrefied straw pellets have superior structural, chemical and combustion properties to coal, they can replace all coal and turn a coal plant into an entirely biomass-fed power station. First generation pellets are limited to a co-firing rate of 15% in modern IGCC plants.

* Bedding humans or livestock
o The straw-filled mattress, also known as palliasse, is still used in many parts of the world.
o It is commonly used as bedding for ruminants and horses. It may be used as bedding and food for small animals, but this often leads to injuries to mouth, nose and eyes as straw is quite sharp.

* Animal feed
o Straw may be fed as part of the roughage component of the diet to cattle that are on a near maintenance level of energy requirement. It has a low digestible energy and nutrient content. The heat generated when microorganisms in a herbivore’s gut digest straw can be useful in maintaining body temperature in cold climates. Due to the risk of impaction and its poor nutrient profile, it should always be restricted to part of the diet.

* Hats
o There are several styles of straw hats that are made of woven straw.
o Until about 100 years ago, thousands of women a the straw plait is imported.[citation needed]

* Thatching
o Thatched roofs are becoming increasingly popular, and the skills of a master thatcher are once again in demand.
* Packaging
o Straw is resistant to being crushed and therefore makes a good packing material. A company in France makes a straw mat sealed in thin plastic sheets.
o Straw envelopes for wine bottles have become rarer, but are still to be found at some wine merchants.

* Paper
o Straw can be pulped to make paper.

* Archery targets
o Heavy gauge straw rope is coiled and sewn tightly together. This is no longer done entirely by hand, but is partially mechanised.

* Horse collars
o Working horses are making a comeback, and there is a need for horse collars stuffed with good quality rye straw. Being a “long straw filler” is a highly skilled job.

* Construction material: bricks / cob
o In many parts of the world, straw is used to bind clay and concrete. This mixture of clay and straw, known as cob, can be used as a building material. There are many recipes for making cob.
o When baled, straw has excellent insulation characteristics. It can be used, alone or in a post-and-beam construction, to build straw bale houses.
o Enviroboard can be made from straw.

* Rope
o Rope made from straw was used by thatchers, in the packaging industry and even in iron foundries.

* Basketry
o Bee skeps and linen baskets are made from coiled and bound together continuous lengths of straw. The technique is known as lip work.

* Sandals
o Koreans wear Jipsin, sandals made of straws.

* Horticulture
o Straw is used in cucumber houses and for mushroom growing.
o In Japan, certain trees are wrapped with straw to protect them from the effects of a hard winter as well as to use them as a trap for parasite insects.
o It is also used in ponds to reduce algae by changing the nutrient ratios in the water.
o The soil under strawberries is covered with straw to protect the ripe berries from dirt, and straw is also used to cover the plants during winter to prevent the cold from killing them.
o Straw also makes an excellent mulch.

* Decoration
o Corn dollies
o Straw marquetry
o Harvest crosses

* Erosion control
o Burned area emergency response
o Ground cover
o In-stream check dams

Source Wikipedia

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John Glassford Guest Speaker for GreenTECH 2008

A good time was had by all at the wonderful 2008 GreenTECH green build, design and technology show where John Glassford was an invited guest speaker, shows such as these are a terribly important gathering of some of Australia’s greatest ecological minded builders and enthusiasts!

From the GreenTECH website

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Thanks to Burkes Backyard!

Thanks to Burkes Backyard for recommending our services!  Thanks also for helping bringing attention to strawbale construction methods.

Burkes Backyard website

Burkes Backyard website

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Nalawala Documentary, Award Winning Straw Bale!

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More Photos re Nalawala!

……”Seeing this building coming from a nation that has a history of killing local flora and fauna for their immediate needs with no thought for the future is very refreshing”

Aboriginal elder Aunty Norma Shelley

The truth window, displaying a portion of the 300 or so bales sourced from the Leeton area for the project.

(Smithfield MP Ninos Khoshaba, Liverpool MP Paul Lynch, Aunty Norma Shelley, Mayor Nick Lalich and Cr Del Bennett cut the ribbon.)

Some young chaps from James Busby High School play the didge at the ribbon cutting ceremony.

A view form above of the partially constructed straw bale building.

Internal walls, displaying the straw bale design.

A view of the final product…wonderful!

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Navigating the New Web Site

We will continue to update this web site with any relevant straw bale building information that comes to hand. In order to get the best out of visiting our site use the drop downs on the left hand side of the page.  This will give you further areas to research e.g. under workshops you have the following areas to look at:

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Class of 100 October 2008

Here are the members of the class of 100 in front of the Bed and Breakfast Jumbo Bale in Ganmain.

Class of # 100
Class of # 100
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