LIVING IN THE EARTH
Rammed earth construction is good for passive solar applications. Ralph Paddy of South Dakota State College has conducted research on rammed earth methods. J. Palmer Boggs and the Millers built their first home in 1949. The technique is discussed in detail.
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In an era which tends to celebrate the new
and shun the old, rammed earth construction stands out as a
paradox: After all, the millennium—sold building method
may well also be the technology of the future ...
which we are just now returning to.
No one knows exactly when
the first rammed earth edifice was built, though historians
agree that the process was employed by the
Romans—during the heyday of that nation's
empire—to build structures in conquered lands. In fact,
the Romans spread the use of earth construction throughout
Europe ... and today, in France (where rammed earth is known
as pise de terre), numerous 400-year-old rammed wall
homes still shelter their occupants with a measure
of comfort and security which no "modern" frame edifice can
offer.
You see, because rammed earth has such a low rate of
thermal conductivity (it's actually near zero), warmth takes
almost 12 hours to work its way through a 14"-thick wall. The
half-day rate of heat transfer makes the material a perfect
substance for providing thermal mass in passive solar
construction ... since the sun's warmth will actually be
reaching the interior of the house during the cold hours of
the night.
In addition, the compressional strength of rammed
earth can be as high as 625 PSI, which—though it's only
two-thirds the value of a similar thickness of
concrete—still makes a rammed earth building nearly as
durable as a bomb shelter.
Why then—if rammed earth
construction is so strong and so time—honored hasn't
this building method caught on in the United States? Well,
the fact is that it did ... once, Ralph Paddy (of South
Dakota State College) conducted extensive research into earth
mixtures and building forms back in the thirties.
Then—
in 1938— the U.S. Department of Agriculture actually
erected an experimental community of rammed earth buildings.
The results of that test were quite positive: The USDA's
final report noted that rammed earth structures—which
would last indefinitely— could be built for as little
as two-thirds the cost of standard frame houses. The earthen
abodes were also shown to be considerably less expensive to
heat and cool, and—because the homes were labor (as
opposed to material) intensive—it was clear that they
would allow do-it-yourselfers plenty of opportunity to save
money.
We can only speculate as to why postwar America
snubbed the rammed earth concept: Perhaps the modest
pise technique seemed too basic in the face of our
newly formed technocracy. Or it may have been the
construction industry—which depends so heavily on
material intensive methods for its livelihood—that
helped deprive rammed earth of its rightful position in
building. Furthermore, the public's then increasing yen for
miracle synthetics certainly had something to do with the
lack of acceptance for so "earthy" a technique.
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