Nature Center Stewardship Stew

Monday, June 18, 2007

Our Designer/Builder, Susan Clellen

Susan overseeing installation of stem wall

Susan E. Clellen, B.F.A., M.F.A.

Presently I am working as a general contractor and as an advocate for natural, sustainable building systems. The exploration of what is environmentally appropriate in building designs and materials will be an ongoing task for the human race. My contribution as an artist/builder is to challenge and explore the myths of what a “natural” structure is, can be and historically ...was. The renewed interest in adobe, rammed earth, cob and straw-bale construction that started in the 70’s and 80’s proved to be quite a progressive movement. Building codes now include most of these and the internet provides an international network of technical support.


In 1991 I was totally immersed in historic restoration work in North Carolina. It was at this time that I became aware of sustainable construction. Recycled, reclaimed and salvaged building materials were required for much of my restoration work and were readily available from condemned older buildings in the rural South. Historic millwork profiles that I needed could also be replicated locally from indigenous and local lumber. Small family- owned sawmills were plentiful and a great source for rough-sawn, milled and untreated lumber.
As a preservationist I had to use all the resources around me. Essentially I was a sustainable preservationist. I also had friends and clients who were living off the land and in intentional communities. It was through these contacts that I began doing alternative construction. Rammed tires, straw-bale, cord-wood, earth- berm, passive solar, and envelope houses were among the many projects.

Over the next six years I was involved in six different straw-bale projects which included the first (experimental permit) house in North Carolina as well as the first official code approved house. I started research on alternative building materials being used all over the country. Straw-bales are great for insulation, are a recycled material, are very labor intensive and require special maintenance. Adobe is good for thermal mass, is easy to build with, requires less maintenance and must be insulated in cold climates. Pumice-crete which is the best of all worlds, has insulation and thermal properties but is only available in volcanic regions. Rastra block is an expensive product, uses recycled materials and has limited availability. Rammed tires are very labor intensive. “Super adobe” is still a work in progress. As I learned more about alternative construction, I felt the need to be in an environment where all these materials were available. I chose Taos, New Mexico.

Upon arriving in Taos I was immediately introduced to adobe and rastra block construction and a short time later pumice-crete. The mix of traditional building materials and modern alternatives is embraced and nurtured in this community. Northern New Mexico is a wealth of historic buildings. The early Spanish churches and Native American pueblo buildings are proof of the longevity of simple indigenous materials. Stone, puddled adobe and traditional adobe buildings are still standing, still occupied. Traditional materials were and are mined regionally. Traditions were handed down through families for hundreds of years. There is something to be said for the survival of those communities in the harsh high desert
environment; what was sustainable then can still be today. Over the course of six years in Taos, I designed and built three homes and helped build two others. What I learned in that time is that there are so many solutions and so few reasons to not pursue them. We need to look for local alternative building resources. We need to build things that last. We need to rethink what was traditional and how it can still be. We need to re-empower people to build and think for themselves.







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Thursday, June 14, 2007

Hiatus

We've got the foundation and stem wall up. We're in a holding pattern until late July for the next phase. But we're still busy planning and looking for all kinds of help from the community - from input from other green builders and architects on design and materials issues to artistic input and participation. Two exciting additions to the list of contributors to the project are Mike Kannard, landscape architect with Schmidt,Copeland, Parker, Stevens and David Saja, Curator and Head of the Dept of Minerology at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History who will be helping us to design a geology wall.

The current list of contributors:

Susan Clellen, Designer, General Contractor

Paul Hummer, Hummer Paving Co.
Robert Belden, Belden Brick Co.
Mike Carr, Carr Bros
Mike Bruder, Bruder Materials
Mike Kennard, Schmidt, Copeland, Parker, Stevens
Lauren Lanphear, Forest City Tree Protection Co.
David Mast, NTH Consultantants, Ltd.
Greg Alber, Alber & Rice Inc.
Steve Manka, Manka Design Studio
Mark Ciccarelli, Studio Techne Architects
Osborne Stone
Leppo Rents
David Saja, Cleveland Museum of Natural History

Gund Foundation
Nancy King Smith Fund

Friday, June 1, 2007

A reminder and an update

We've had a reminder the last four days at the Nature Center why we started thinking about a Stewardship Center in the first place. The kids in the picture are from Ruffing Montessori School doing their annual service to the Nature Center by pulling invasive yellow flag iris out of the mini-marsh. The kids look forward to the opportunity to "get down and dirty" and in the process they learn about native habitats and invasive plants .
Sometimes they get very dirty.
When they are finished they get hosed down and add a layer of mud to the equipment room in the building and the service area. How wonderful it will be when they can start out by gathering at the Stewardship Center to talk about what they will be doing , get their equipment then return to the storage/mud room to clean up - using water from the rain barrels.
What is the progress on the project? We've got the foundation and the stem wall. From now through the end of June we're lining up materials for the framing and roofing. We need lumber, we need hardware, we need roofing material and we will need some skilled labor for construction. Any and all donations are appreciated. Any and all suggestions are considered.
Once the framing is up then the fun can begin. We will be hand building the straw-bale and cob walls. Hopefully this will be starting in August.
Stay tuned.

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Pestival Pix


Sergio Abramof's creative cuisine from the May 19 Pestival.


Pleasing pesto plate.



Roast beast sliders.

























The Evil weed