Shelter: 40th Anniversary Edition

Shelter: 40th Anniversary Edition

Shelter: 40th Anniversary Edition

Shelter: 40th Anniversary Edition

Paperback(Second Edition)

$29.95 
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Overview

Read the definitive, complete guide to shelters—more than 300,000 copies sold!

Shelter is so amazing, so revolutionary, that the best way to describe it is with one word: everything! It’s a history of architecture, a do-it-yourself (DIY) guide, a scrapbook, and a collection of essays and stories. If you’ve ever wondered about any aspect of houses, homes, or other simple structures in which people have lived, this is the book for you.

First published in 1973, Shelter remains a source of inspiration and invention. Including the nuts-and-bolts aspects of building, the book covers such topics as dwellings, from Iron Age huts to Bedouin tents to Togo's tin-and-thatch houses; nomadic shelters, from tipis to “housecars;” and domes; dome cities; sod iglus; and even treehouses.

Authors Lloyd Kahn and Bob Easton recount personal stories about alternative dwellings that demonstrate sensible solutions to problems associated with using materials found in the environment—with fascinating, often surprising results.

Shelter is many things:

  • a visually dynamic, oversized compendium of organic architecture, past and present;
  • a how-to book that includes more than 1,250 illustrations; and
  • a Whole Earth Catalog-type of sourcebook for living in harmony with the earth by using every conceivable material.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780936070117
Publisher: Adventure Publications, Incorporated
Publication date: 05/01/2000
Series: The Shelter Library of Building Books
Edition description: Second Edition
Pages: 176
Sales rank: 1,008,087
Product dimensions: 11.00(w) x 14.50(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Lloyd Kahn started building more than 50 years ago and has lived in a self-built home ever since. If he’d been able to buy a wonderful, old, good-feeling house, he might have never started building. But it was always cheaper to build than to buy, and by building himself, he could design what he wanted and use materials that he wanted to live with.

Lloyd set off to learn the art of building in 1960. He liked the whole process immensely. Ideally he’d have worked with a master carpenter long enough to learn the basics, but there was never time. He learned from friends and books and by blundering his way into a process that required a certain amount of competence. His perspective was that of a novice, a homeowner, rather than a pro. As he learned, he felt that he could tell others how to build—or at least get them started on the path to creating their own homes.

Through the years, he’s personally gone from post and beam to geodesic domes to stud-frame construction. It’s been a constant learning process, and this has led him into investigating many methods of construction. For five years in the late ’60s to early ’70s, he built geodesic domes. He got into book publishing by producing Domebook One in 1970 and Domebook 2 in 1971.

He gave up on domes (as homes) and published his company’s namesake Shelter in 1973. Since then, Shelter Publications has produced books on a variety of subjects and returned to its roots with Home Work in 2004, The Barefoot Architect and Builders of the Pacific Coast in 2008, Tiny Homes in 2012, and more.

Building is Lloyd’s favorite subject. Even in this day and age, building a house with one’s own hands can save a ton of money and—if you follow it through—you can get what you want in a home.

Bob Easton is an architect and owner of Bob Easton AIA Architect in Montecito, California. He designs in many styles to meet clients’ needs and budgets. His firm specializes in fine residential and commercial design and interiors. Bob is the co-author and designer of Domebook One, Domebook 2, Shelter, and Shelter II.

Read an Excerpt

Heating and Insulation

An extremely important consideration in building a home, often overlooked by the inexperienced builder, is insulation, as well as siting and design considerations that minimize heat loss in winter, heat gain in summer.

Before building anything, we urge you to get available local climatological information and read sections of books that explain insulation. (Check the library.) In Kern’s The Owner Built Home there is excellent information on siting, heating, cooling, planting design and building climatology. In Wood Frame House Construction there is a good chapter on thermal insulation and vapor barriers. (See bibliography.)

We cannot cover the subject adequately here, and there is no substitute for local knowledge, but following are a few principles that may be helpful:

House orientation is very important. If windows face the hot summer sun, there will be high heat gain. (In one dome with a great quantity of windows facing the sun, temperatures got over 140°, and several phonograph records actually melted—one of them was It’s a Beautiful Day.) Conversely, windows on a wall facing cold winter winds will admit cold. And doors and windows should be sealed well (felt strips) to keep out winds.

There are three principles of heat transfer: convection, conduction, and radiation. Convection refers to the currents in the air that transfer heat through unsealed spaces; conduction is heat transferring through solid surfaces; radiation is direct transfer of heat through the air. All three of these principles play a part in heat loss and gain in buildings, and the different methods of insulating involve one or more of the three.

An example of stopping loss via convection would be fire blocking in stud walls that stops drafts (and fire danger), or fill insulation. An example of dealing with conduction would be layer(s) of insulation with air spaces in between. Finally, radiation heat loss is best stopped by a bright metal surface.

In double-wall construction (studs with exterior, interior sheathing) the most common and cheapest insulation is the flexible fiberglass with aluminum backing and built-in vapor barriers. This is stapled in between the studs; the aluminum facing in, to be effective, with an air space between the aluminum and interior wall surface.

(A principle to remember with aluminum is that, for it to reflect heat by radiation, there must be air space; otherwise it will transfer heat by conduction.)

Floors can also be insulated with roll fiberglass. Exposed ceilings can be insulated by rigid insulation on top of the roof sheathing. (0.75" rigid insulation is twice as effective as the half-inch.)

In colder climates, sprayed polyurethane foam is a consideration. It is the best insulation but expensive and extremely dangerous if it catches fire, as it burns explosively and emits poisonous gases. If used, it should be protected with a fireproof wall inside, such as sheet rock or plaster.

Another source of heat loss is imperfect combustion in the burner of the house heater. A brick or stone fireplace loses a great deal of heat, although a heatilator unit will improve this considerably. If a metal flue is used, the more of it that is inside, the more heat will remain inside, rather than being lost outside. (See The Last Whole Earth Catalog for fireplace info.)

Low-ceilinged rooms are obviously easier to heat. In cold climates, double-glazing (must be sealed) is used to insulate windows.

In 1973, it took an average of $90 worth of propane to heat a three-bedroom house in a cold area in Northern California, and many people in the area were switching to diesel heating. Fuel is going to get scarcer, so if you are building, insulate well; the extra money you spend will be paid back within a few winters.

Table of Contents

The Shelter Library of Building Books

Caves, Huts, Tents

Native Americans

European Timber

The New World

Barns

Building

Materials

Nomad Living

Dwelling

Domes

Builders

Energy, Water, Food, Waste

Color

Bibliography

Credits

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