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Straw Bale Building and its' Economic Perspective

Larisa Brojan (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Architecture, Zoisova 12 SI-1000 Ljubljana)
Peggi L Clouston (University of Massachusetts, Dep. of Environmental Conversation, Amherst MA01003)

Open House International

ISSN: 0168-2601

Article publication date: 1 March 2017

37

Abstract

The accessible nature of straw bale building lends itself well to self-built and workshop-built housing; straw is known to be both relatively inexpensive and easy to work with for people new to construction. A question then arises as to whether or not hiring an experienced builder can reduce overall costs of such a structure. This study conducts a worldwide survey to straw bale home owners to answer this question and to determine general economic data on straw bale homes, such as: what home owners value, who the main builder typically is, and what usually causes budgets to overrun. A key finding is that self-building is economically justified if the projected saving is higher than the cost of a contractor and if the usually longer time needed to build the home is amenable to the investor. An economic case study is also conducted on a straw bale home in Radomlje, Slovenia. All building expenses are categorized by building phase and subgrouped by cost in accordance with accepted building standards. A key observation is how demanding any specific building phase is in comparison to conventional building.

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Citation

Brojan, L. and Clouston, P.L. (2017), "Straw Bale Building and its' Economic Perspective", Open House International, Vol. 42 No. 1, pp. 23-28. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-01-2017-B0004

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Open House International

Copyright © 2017 Open House International

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