Portland Community College, SE Center
Instructor Scott Howard
http://www.earthenhand.com
Earthen Paints at Portland Community College
- Get Dirty! Create Your Own Earthen Paints
9am-12pm, October 23rd
PCC SE center, Portland, Oregon
Create durable, beautiful, inexpensive earthen paints to enhance your home. Earthen paints are non-toxic, easy to apply, easy to maintain, and are planet friendly. This hands-on class includes global examples of earthen building methods. Snacks provided.
Tuition = $40 payable to Earthen Hand, $29 to PCC
Email us at workshops@earthenhand.com. to begin registration.
AND
Go to www.pcc.edu/schedule for more information and registration.
Angelic Organics Learning Center 1547 Rockton Rd Caledonia, IL 61011
Instructor Randy Mermel
http://www.learngrowconnect.org/node/2473
Come join us as we learn to build with cob, an age-old natural building technique with simple materials such as clay, sand, and straw. The emphasis will be on hands-on learning as we mix cob and earthen plaster, and provide you with the skills to build an oven in your own backyard. Class will meet in two locations (10 miles apart): at the Dome Gathering Space for building a new oven, and at Angelic Organics Learning Center for baking in a completed oven. Participants will be invited to help with work sessions on the oven foundation prior to the class.
To review our registration policies, please visit: http://www.csalearningcenter.org/what/on-farm/public/registration.
Actual costs of workshops are close to double our workshop fees. If you are able, please consider making an additional donation to help cover the full cost of your workshop.
Price: $75.00
Warren, VT
Instructor Ace McArleton, Jacob Deva Racusin
http://www.yestermorrow.org/courses/detail/strawbale-design-build?StartDate=2010-08-27&SortColumn=StartDate&SortDir=ASC&CategorySlug=natural-building
Have you always wondered about strawbale construction? Heard it is only for hot and dry climates? Think again! With their combination of insulation and thermal mass, plastered strawbale walls can be perfect for cold – and even wet – climates if they are designed and built according to a set of time tested principles. This course balances sessions in the classroom and on a demonstration project so you will learn to think your way through a bale house while gaining a feel for the nature of straw, clay and lime as building materials.
| November 20, 2010 | to | November 21, 2010 |
Warren, VT
Instructor Ace McArleton
www.yestermorrow.org
Finishing walls with natural, nontoxic products imparts a number of benefits to a building, whether you are working on a plastered strawbale wall, or interior gypsum wall board. The ingredients are simple and safe, the process is creative and fun, and the possibilities are endless! In this course, we will look at the art, science and practice of making your own paints, washes, and other finishes with clay, lime, casein, wheat paste, mica, sand, pigments, oils and other natural materials. Students will be introduced to a variety of materials and their working properties, as well as gain a solid understanding of the basics of where and how to apply these products to different wall systems. This class will be mostly hands-on, with discussion ongoing throughout the course.
| January 5, 2011 | to | January 23, 2011 |
Dominican Republic
Instructor Kyle Bergman
http://www.yestermorrow.org/courses/detail/design-build-in-the-dominican-republic?StartDate=2010-08-26&SortColumn=StartDate&SortDir=ASC
This 18-day design/build adventure will focus on building a unique community project in a rural part of the Dominican Republic. The class begins with a group design process culminating in a single design emanating from the collective ideas of the participants. The remainder of the course is an intensive sprint to build what has been designed, utilizing local, environmentally appropriate materials, while allowing the design and building processes to continually inform one another. This class will take place in a remote context; with rustic lodging, limited or no electricity, lots of nature, and tons of hard work. It will be the experience of a lifetime, providing an immersion into a unique Afro-Caribbean island culture, while fostering community development through hands-on action that meets the needs and furthers the goals of a grass roots organization. Tuition includes travel within the Dominican Republic, camping facilities, and all meals. Visit the Yestermorrow website for project details.
| January 2, 2011 | to | January 13, 2011 |
Warren, VT
Instructor Ace McArleton
http://http://www.yestermorrow.org/courses/detail/natural-design-build?StartDate=2010-08-26&SortColumn=StartDate&SortDir=ASC
This course provides students with a comprehensive exploration of all facets of creating an energy efficient, climate-specific natural structure. In this two-week intensive, we will engage in studio sessions, hands-on construction experience, lectures, slide shows, and site tours. In the studio, students will develop a comprehensive design of a project through the creation of drawings of elevations, sections, plans, and scale
models. In the shop, students will build a variety of insulative wall systems, examining critical details such as doors and windows, wall to roof connections, air sealing, framing options, plastering, and much more. Topics include straw bale construction, fiber-clay infill and other natural wall systems, clay and lime plasters, natural roof options, alternative foundations, water and energy conservation systems, permaculture and building-site relationships, and social and cultural contexts. Emphasis will be paid to designing and detailing
for success in cold, wet climates.
| January 22, 2011 | to | January 23, 2011 |
Warren, VT
Instructor Hilton Dier III, John Ringle
http://www.yestermorrow.org/courses/detail/solar-design?StartDate=2010-08-26&SortColumn=StartDate&SortDir=ASC
This workshop will present the basic design, theory and methods required to maximize the solar potential of your present or future home. Day one will use lectures, slide shows and tours to show how to use passive design for home heating, cooling and day lighting. Day two will cover the basics of photovoltaics for home power. The course will expand your understanding of how to use the sun’s energy to brighten your life, heat your living spaces and water, and recharge your batteries for a more natural, comfortable and economical home.
| October 22, 2010 | to | October 23, 2010 |
Warren, VT
Instructor Gaelan Brown
http://www.yestermorrow.org/courses/detail/diy-alternative-hot-water-system?StartDate=2010-08-26&SortColumn=StartDate&SortDir=ASC&CategorySlug=solar-design
The French farmer/inventor Jean Pain became famous for his innovative ideas about the interrelationship between agriculture and energy production. One of his concepts, the Pain Mound, focused on the use of woody biomass as an effective compost material while collecting heat from the composting process. This course will consist of the construction of a Pain Mound hot water system in the same location as a prototype built in 2009, incorporating the existing plumbing and water-lines but using fresh biomass material.