One of the unique features of this book is its step-by-step description of the process for creating your own building materials. Another is that every building shown within was constructed using a modified cruck frame. This method consists of using two or more A-frames, and was used in medieval times to build houses, barns and halls. Law has adapted it structurally to triangulate, and therefore brace, rectilinear buildings. In the back of the book are sequential photos of the construction of seven different round-pole buildings.
The posts, beams and crucks of these buildings are round poles, usually harvested on or near the building site. The entire skeleton of each Roundwood building is built with wood that hasn’t been milled or transported a great distance. These buildings look good from the outside and feel good to be in, thanks to the aesthetics of natural building.
Full disclosure: I wrote the foreword to this book, so I was already a fan. But when I saw the actual book — as opposed to the electronic files I’d viewed beforehand — I was thrilled with how it turned out. The photography is beautiful, and the book guides you through the entire roundwood timber framing process: planting and tending trees, obtaining the tools needed, learning the joining methods for this type of construction, and perfecting floor-, wall- and roof-building techniques.
Not everyone can build like this. You need to have some land with adequate tree growth. For those who do, Roundwood Timber Framing provides a path to a more sustainable method of construction — one in which you use your own hands and local resources to create a comfortable, attractive shelter.
Daily Archives: March 7, 2012
Stainless Steel Kitchen Sinks – Green Demolitions for Chappaqua NY Real Estate
5 Reasons Your Content Marketing Must Address Price | Social Media Examiner
AEC-NJ ProCircle Event at Green Demolitions | Armonk Realtor
Commercial Market Outlook – Rental Rates Expected to Increase | Mount Kisco Real Estate
As the economic recovery continues in the 2 to 3 percent range rental rates are projected to increase in both the residential and commercial sectors. Commercial space completions have been below absorption, and demand for commercial space has started to increase. Based on the currently available economic forecast, a modest rent growth for the commercial sector is projected. Additional details are available here.
Expect Constant or Higher Residential Prices in the Next Year | North Salem NY Realtor
The most recent REALTORS® Confidence Index indicates that price expectations for the forthcoming year are up – substantially. There are also reports of increased REALTOR® confidence in the residential market outlook, so this information indicates that as of January 2012 REALTORS® were seeing residential markets that appeared to be in an upward mode.
Cross River Real Estate | Department Store Sales vs. Discount Store Sales
Each day the Research staff takes a look at recently released economic indicators, addressing what these indicators mean for REALTORS® and their clients. Today’s update discusses department store sales vs. discount store sales.
- Consumers are steadily beginning to show back up at malls. During the recession of a few years ago, department stores got hammered as consumers mostly went to discount outlets.
- Today’s data on same store retail sales shows a gain of 3.1 percent at department stores with sales rising 3.6 percent at discount shops. The narrowing of the gap in sales trends between the two types of stores is consistent with a better economic outlook in the minds of consumers.
- Some commercial real estate investors have been buying up strip malls by borrowing from the bank at a 3% rate. Provided the strip mall gives, say, a 7% cap rate (rental income divided by purchase price), that is an easy 4% into the bottom line. Now, some investors may want to seek out mall purchases that yield good cap rates since there is a revenue recovery in department sales.
ADP Employment, Mortgage Purchase Applications | Waccabuc Real Estate
Each day the Research staff takes a look at recently released economic indicators, addressing what these indicators mean for REALTORS® and their clients. Today’s update discusses ADP employment figures and mortgage purchase applications.
- Solid job gains, according to ADP, a company that processes payroll checks for many private sector companies. A net 216,000 private sector jobs were added in February.
- ADP does not measure government sector jobs, which have been declining by about 20,000 each month as state and local governments are trying to balance the budget. So the official job figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics this Friday will likely show about 195,000 in net new job creation. Depending upon whether labor force participation recovers, the unemployment may not necessarily fall even with job gains.
- Remember, in the past 3 years, many people enrolled in schools, took early retirement packages, or simply dropped out of the labor force because of job search frustration. A re-entry of these people into the job market can keep the unemployment rate elevated. But for home buying and commercial real estate occupancy, it is all about job creation, and more demand is being added with each passing month.
- Separately, productivity rose 0.9 percent in the fourth quarter of last year. It simply means we are able to pump out 0.9 percent more products and services because of improvements in technology. The rise in productivity is the source of long run prosperity. America has become the economic superpower, surpassing Britain about 100 years ago because of faster productivity growth in the U.S. Looking over the shoulder, however, productivity growth in China is notably higher than in the U.S.
- Finally in today’s economic data, mortgage applications for a home purchase rose 2 percent in the past week. Even with this increase, there has not been any notable pick up in this data, and it has not corresponded in an upturn in home sales. Application data misses out on all-cash deals and the data is only about applications and not approvals.









