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39 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars an Introductory and Directory
An ancient method of habitat building, cordwood masonry has experienced a renewed interest due to modern technique improvements and the positive, beneficial characteristics gained on many levels in respect to the environment, energy efficiency from it's unique thermal mass, simplicity and easy access of materials needed, relative durability and the overall natural beauty...
Published on July 1, 2003 by B.P.

versus
55 of 76 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars STATE OF THE ART FARCE
FIRST OFF,YOU WILL FIND ME QUITE BLUNT.BUT I HAVE 37 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE WITH LOGS AND KNOW WHAT I`M TALKING ABOUT.I`M ANONYMOUS BECAUSE I`M A WHISTLEBLOWER ON MANY MYTHS PERPETRATED BY THE AUTHORS.

CORDWOOD IS IN ITS INFANCY AS LONG AS ALL THE CORDWOOD AUTHORS [THE MAIN PROPONENTS] OF CORDWOOD CHOOSE TO.
[1] BUILD ON THE GROUND
[2]REFUSE TO TREAT WOOD...

Published on May 1, 2003 by guy cordwood


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39 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars an Introductory and Directory, July 1, 2003
By 
B.P. "tilley_traveler" (Wisconsin, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
An ancient method of habitat building, cordwood masonry has experienced a renewed interest due to modern technique improvements and the positive, beneficial characteristics gained on many levels in respect to the environment, energy efficiency from it's unique thermal mass, simplicity and easy access of materials needed, relative durability and the overall natural beauty. This latest book by Rob Roy is great for the person who is interested in cordwood structures and doesn't know much about the undertaking to building their own home in the same fashion. With this book you'll obtain a general understanding of the process and requirements, which is presented with thorough and even mathematical explanations.

The book is broken up into four parts dedicated to different topic concerns. The first section highlights a little history of the scientific art, including an introduction to the author, his passion and experiences in cordwood masonry, coming from some 25 years. The next section addresses the procedure of construction and touches on some important issues with technique. Also pesented here are some successful solutions learn by others for polygon floor plans, optimum corner strength, using the post & beam method, cement foundations and footings (with brief notes on earthquake endurance to where it may be applicable), and incorporating bottle designs by recycling glass to bring in special touches of color and light. Other fundamental topics discussed include electrical wiring, double wall and general wall thickness, making the Lomax corner, recipes for mortar mixes, papercrete (paper enhanced mortar) and "cobwood" variations using straw, plus pointing the mortar, and patching cracks after wood and/or mortar shrinkage. It also talks about what species of wood are best, how to select, prepare and store the wood and describes a design for making a specialized cordwood cutoff table using a chainsaw. Equally important, the book also touches on a few common sense reminders about construction site safety.

Information in parts two and three overlap some, but it's kept from sounding repetitive. The third group of chapters is primarily dedicated to personal accounts and stories from various cordwood owner-builders from the United States, Canada, Europe and Chile.

The last section hinges on financial matters and business details. The importance of being organized and informed about construction codes, seeking advice from an architect, getting a builder's permit, and how to deal with the building inspector and other paper people. Part four also provides some basic thoughts and how-to ideas for building a cordwood home mortgage free. The useful bibliography includes an overview of related books, videos, magazines, websites and online groups to further your knowledge; these are given with short, helpful descriptions.

In vast majority the photographs throughout the book are black and white, but there's an eight page middle section with beautiful color photos of cordwood buildings inside and out. It's not the only resource you should bank on, but this book is certainly a superb, user friendly introductory to the topic and a nice follow up reference after, or even before workshop participation. For those who are serious about building a sustainable home using the cordwood technique, I highly recommend it. [reviewed at amazon.com by tilley_traveler]

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great resource, July 7, 2005
By 
This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
My local library has a copy of Rob Roy's previous cordwood book. It is almost always checked out, and everyone I know uses it as the cordwood bible.
This book, for be has been just that. I am in the process of planning my cordwood bath house, ad everytime I find myself wondering about a step in the process or seeking a reasoning, I simply turn to this book. Every time I have a question, it has an answer! Also, it has lots of pictures which are particulaly helpful for someone as visually oriented as I am.
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42 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cordwood WALL Building, November 16, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
New society has hit a home run with their recent building books. Cordwood Building now moves to the front of the line for those interested in this kind of building.

BUT, keep in mind these alternative methods, be they straw bale, or in this case Cordwood Building, only deal with the walls of the building (the book covers roofs, but they are basicaly standard details). All the difficult decisions, and high performance solutions are really needed to build the floors, roofs, and foundations, but these don't seem sexy topics for alternative construction. Cordwood is just a slow way to build walls that would be every bit as good (with careful detailing) and a lot more resalable if they were made from 2x lumber. Rather than spending weeks or months getting your walls up, 2x takes an afternoon for 2 people on average sized floorplan of the kind of house being built here.

We have a group building a cement and foam alternative construction at the end of the road, and they are engaged in months of building with their floor exposed to the weather, while they finish off walls that would have taken a crew of two only a week. Beware of these nifty solutions to non-problems. It only take 1 4x4 per 8-10 of wall to hold up a second story, don't fall into wallism in building your house.

If you want to learn about cordwood, however, this IS the book.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, July 17, 2003
By 
dylanmarissa "pkbradley" (Madison, WI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
This book, like other of Rob Roy's books we own, is clearly written, provides a tremendous amount of usable information without being overwhelming to the novice and is clever and engaging to boot.

My husband & I attended one of Roy's workshops a few years ago and were delighted with what we learned and the confidence we gained helping to build a corwood sauna.

We also toured cordwood homes by several of Roy's students. The homes are beautiful and holding up extremely well to the extremes of weather in Northern Wisconsin.

I recommend this book to anyone interested in cordwood construction and also highly recommend Roy's book, "Mortgage Free," for folks interested in any type of owner-built home.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars We love this book - We're Chapter 6 - Round w/ 16 sides! !, December 17, 2003
By 
David Fraser (Bancroft, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
Rob tells our story with a wonderful craft that will help you share our building experience in 1995. We called our home Hutchnden House because it was where a Bunny (Bernice) and a Bear(David) lived for 5 wonderful years. If you buy this book and have questions about our building experience with a hexadecagon, email us at fraser@terracom.ca and we would be happy to help in any way we can. Since our building in 1995 Bunny has designed several homes, one, a single story 1600 sq ft. beauty is fantastic. Thank you Rob and Jaki for your inspiration and encouragement. Bunny and Bear
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55 of 76 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars STATE OF THE ART FARCE, May 1, 2003
This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
FIRST OFF,YOU WILL FIND ME QUITE BLUNT.BUT I HAVE 37 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE WITH LOGS AND KNOW WHAT I`M TALKING ABOUT.I`M ANONYMOUS BECAUSE I`M A WHISTLEBLOWER ON MANY MYTHS PERPETRATED BY THE AUTHORS.

CORDWOOD IS IN ITS INFANCY AS LONG AS ALL THE CORDWOOD AUTHORS [THE MAIN PROPONENTS] OF CORDWOOD CHOOSE TO.
[1] BUILD ON THE GROUND
[2]REFUSE TO TREAT WOOD [AGAINST,SWELLING, ROT,INSECTS,MOLDS, FUNGI ATTACK ETC.]
[3]THINK THAT RAIN FALLS ONLY VERTICAL
[4]THINK ROOF OVERHANGS ARE ALL YOU NEED.
[5]USE IMPROPER FELLING,SEASONING AND IMPROPER BUILDING TECHNIQUES.
[6]USE SAWDUST AND LIME INSULATION.

DON`T GET THE WRONG IDEA...CORDWOOD IS DO ABLE BUT IF YOU FOLLOW THE BOOKS INSTRUCTIONS.YOU WILL GET THE SAME FAILED RESULTS AS ROBS TRAINED STUDENTS IN THIS BOOK.ROB USES A SAWDUST LIME INSULATION THAT PACKS AND WHEN THE LOGS SHRINK YOU HAVE GAPS IN THE WALL.WHERE AIR AND WATER CAN PENETRATE.I OFFER REALITY CORDWOOD INFORMATION ON THE LARGEST CORDWOOD BOARD ON THE NET.WHICH ROB DIDN`T CARE TO MENTION IN HIS BOOK.
I HAVE A CORDWOOD NEWBEE PAGE ON THE NET AS WELL.WHICH JUST DEALS WITH THE BASICS OF CORDWOOD.READ IT AND YOU WILL BE ABLE TO JUDGE A CORDWOOD BUILDERS ABILITY.ROB ONCE ASKED ME TO REMOVE IT...I GUESS HE FELT UNCOMFORTABLE.
MY BOARD GIVES THE FULL PICTURE OF CORDWOOD.I LIST ALL THE FLAWS OF THE SYSTEM AS WELL AS THEIR CURES.CORDWOOD IS FULL OF BUILT IN SAFETIES THAT MAKES IT ALMOST FOOL PROOF.

CORDWOODGUY

PS:I HAVE A VISUAL DISABILITY AND HAVE TO USE UPPER CASE.SO I`M NOT SHOUTING.[I`VE TRIED EVERY THING TO CORRECT FOR THIS AND IT HASN`T WORKED...SORRY]

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18 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Too much froth, March 25, 2006
By 
P. McCann (San Diego, CA, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
Too much anecdotal fluff - relates boring stories and information about people that I found irrelevant as a reader. It was irritating the way the authors kept obsessively giving compliments and acknowledgements to friends and contributors throughout the book; almost like it were a club writing the book for themselves and not for paying customers. I am instinctively suspicious of people that try to sell me things, and the fact that the authors kept making plugs and product endorsements made me doubt their credibility. Because of all the aforementioned sludge, this was a hard book to get through; I found I couldn't read it; I had to skim through it to get the useful information. Which was there, but like I said, it was to deeply buried. This book should be edited down to half its length. The book is worth checking out of the library, but probably not worth buying: 2.75 out of 5.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Cordwood, the only way to go!!!, September 18, 2008
By 
This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
Mr. Roy has done so much research into this subject. His formulas alone are worth the price of the book. Aong with timberframing and his book on underground housing, I have finalized my plans for building my next home. Keep up the good work Mr. Roy!!!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Must have book, July 10, 2008
By 
REB (Austin, Texas United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
This book doesn't tell you everything that you need to know about the subject but it gives you a whole lot of information and sets you on your way. The information is very good. If you are a beginner and have never tried this kind of thing then this is where you start.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great book, March 24, 2008
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This review is from: Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) (Paperback)
This book is a great read. Enjoyable and yet it seems to give plenty of info on the different aspects of the cordwood building process. More than half way through I found out that there was a glossary in the back which helps explain some of the terminology. I would highly recommend this book for anyone thinking of building a cordwood home. This book will give you most of the know-how to build it and most importantly it will help you decide if you do want to build cordwood. It worked for me. My wife and I are presently saving up to build a cordwood home. I think it would be a good idea to watch the "Complete Cordwood DVD" before actually building.

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Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series)
Cordwood Building: The State of the Art (Natural Building Series) by Robert L. Roy (Paperback - January 1, 2003)
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