[GSBN] Bayside Strawbale Hurricane Damage strategy
bobregon
bobregon at austin.rr.com
Thu Sep 28 23:10:45 UTC 2017
Thanks for the update Kendra. I also tried to call Sarah and assumed she was in recovery mode. Can u send me the photos?Ben
Sent from my Verizon 4G LTE smartphone
-------- Original message --------
From: Dodson Harper <dodson at reginc.com>
Date: 9/28/17 5:23 PM (GMT-06:00)
To: Global Straw Building Network <gsbn at sustainablesources.com>
Subject: Re: [GSBN] Bayside Strawbale Hurricane Damage strategy
Kendra
Thanks for this email. I called Sarah a couple of weeks ago but did not hear back. I would like to see some photos if possible.....
Dodson Harper
Principal
Resource Engineering Group
O: 970.349.1216
C: 970.209.3938
> On Sep 28, 2017, at 4:02 PM, Kindra Welch <kindra at claysandstraw.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Folks, We had the privilege several weeks ago of having a project we baled and plastered in 2015 sit through a direct hit from a Category 5 hurricane, Harvey, as it made landfall on the Texas coast. The project belongs to Sarah Robbins and sits near Bayside, TX on a little corner of land between Mission Bay and Copano Bay. Design by Ben Obregon, Engineering by REG.
>
> The bales and their lime plaster did great. The plaster on the windward walls looks sandblasted with a few dings from projectiles. A few minor cracks on corners.
>
> However a section of the roof peeled off: the dark side of the wrap around porch? lightly nailed roof plywood? … And some bales were soaked from above.
>
> So I drove down and poked it with a moisture meter. Most readings at the top of the walls maxed out the meter, about half way down the wall we started getting 30-40% readings. “normal” walls that kept their roof read about 20-24%. The owner, Sarah, has kept the meter and will re-evaluate every week to see if there are any changes.
>
> Besides the missing section of roof, the interior was completely soaked and the cork floor ruined, but thats it for damages. The solar and rainwater were up a running the whole time, so she had power and water when everyone else had none.
>
> The homeowners insurance is not expected to cover damages, but FEMA might come through with a little something. Therefore we are trying to keep repair costs to a minimum.
>
> So my thought is to wait a few weeks, maybe a few months, and see if the walls dry out. If they start to smell we will have to take action. In which case I would like to remove the exterior plaster and bales, leaving interior plaster (re-inforced lime 1” thick - still in perfect condition) intact. And replace bales from the exterior, then replaster the exterior.
> What do you think, will it work? What implications will I have from new bales having no connection to interior plaster?
>
> I have pics if anyone is interested.
>
> Kindra
> Clay Sand Straw
> Austin, TX
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