If it’s safe from mice, bugs, and fire, then it just seems like the housing equivalent of wearing a boot on your head. You can do it. It’s not hurting you or anyone around you. But it’s kinda just weird. Is there some sort of benefits to this over a normal house? Or is it just a boot on your head?
Pros: Cheap, good insulator, doesn’t require any experience to install, local, low environmental footprint.
Cons: Thick, does not handle moisture well at all so it must be completely sealed. A small leak will ruin all the hay in the exposed area and, with a bit of airflow, can spontaneously combust. More likely, though, is that it just degrades rapidly. Like a lot of things, good planning can keep you fine.
My biggest question is: why?
If it’s safe from mice, bugs, and fire, then it just seems like the housing equivalent of wearing a boot on your head. You can do it. It’s not hurting you or anyone around you. But it’s kinda just weird. Is there some sort of benefits to this over a normal house? Or is it just a boot on your head?
deleted by creator
Also incredibly good insulation.
The next benefit is, that concrete has a very bad CO2 footprint. Straw as an organic renewable resource has a very good CO2 footprint.
deleted by creator
Pros: Cheap, good insulator, doesn’t require any experience to install, local, low environmental footprint.
Cons: Thick, does not handle moisture well at all so it must be completely sealed. A small leak will ruin all the hay in the exposed area and, with a bit of airflow, can spontaneously combust. More likely, though, is that it just degrades rapidly. Like a lot of things, good planning can keep you fine.
A plan that requires everything to work perfectly is a bad plan.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Du hast das 10 mal pfostiert. Server machen server Dinge.
Hatte zig Socket timeouts. Hat Dan wohl jedes mal trotzdem postiert.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator