The planetβs two biggest assholes are the President of the United States and the worldβs richest man.
This is not ideal.
@shaymy3rs.bsky.social
design, art, architecture in the mountain west + midwest | www.solstice.design
The planetβs two biggest assholes are the President of the United States and the worldβs richest man.
This is not ideal.
So I was really confronting the fact that this industry or profession or whatever that Iβve dedicated a lot of my life to is more or less directly tied to the destruction and swallowing up of all of the natural places that Iβve always sought refuge in. Iβm still confronting that fact.
06.04.2025 14:40 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0I was also spending quite a bit of time camping solo deep in the deserts of southern Utah and northern Arizona, exploring canyons and reading a lot of Ed Abbey, for what thatβs worth.
06.04.2025 14:35 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0It was inspired in large part by what I perceived to be this unspoken, widespread conception of Modernism as a kind of Manifest Destiny, that led to a lot of frustration and disillusionment early on in my career in architecture.
06.04.2025 14:33 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0The whole thing was a kind of study of the concept of βutopiaβ framed specifically thru a few influential architects and authors I like. Itβs a little scattered, unpolished probably, but the ideas behind it seem worthy as ever for discussion in the year 2025.
06.04.2025 14:31 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Well I just stumbled on essay of sorts I wrote in 2017, re-read it and decided to throw it up on Medium. Itβs the first thing Iβve βpublishedβ on a digital platform, so Iβm not really sure what to do with it other than say, here it is if you feel inclined to look:
medium.com/@shay_83069/...
I appreciate the tip, Iβm going to look into PHN. For us, the addtl burden of the PHIUS process just makes it unrealistic for most projects. To be fair, this is far less of a problem with PHIUS than it is regressive zoning regs in the cities we work in most.
30.01.2025 18:14 β π 3 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Is there much difference between PHN and PHIUS methodology? Iβm a certified CPHC thru PHIUS, but not familiar with PHN yet. Itβs been really challenging where we work to mesh passive house design with all of the other administrative, economic and labor challenges that already exist.
30.01.2025 18:04 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Is anyone here looking into probiotics and building materials by chance? There are some interesting claims around treating hempcrete lately. worldbiomarketinsights.com/probiotic-ar...
30.01.2025 17:52 β π 12 π 3 π¬ 1 π 0Can I ask where youβre working? Iβm a firm believer in the principles, and also frustrated in how difficult it is to achieve the standard in the US, which may be a cultural issue as much as anything. It seems like the rest of the world has been able to adopt passivhaus far more easily.
30.01.2025 17:50 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Agreed. We try to approach each project a unique challenge requiring a unique solution. The principles are the same, but weβre dealing with different approvals processes, different site and microclimate, different clients, etc. not to mention constantly changing economics of materials and labor.
30.01.2025 15:07 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Plus many of our projects are so overburdened by administrative requirements (permitting, fire code, HOA, etc) that adding in a cert or metrics like passive house becomes ridiculous to pull off. I like elegant, simple low tech solutions, and thatβs becoming a pipe dream in many places we work.
30.01.2025 15:05 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Definitely. And those principles are the cheapest and easiest to achieve as long as they are considered at the beginning of the process. Iβve become really disillusioned with high-tech solutions to problems that can be mostly addressed with good design.
30.01.2025 14:58 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0For sure. Part of what weβve seen lately is a trend toward high tech and proprietary solutions which solve 1 problem and create 2 or 3. I think itβs a combination of dealing with challenging economics, timelines and permitting requirements, as well as the novelty of new products.
30.01.2025 14:54 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 2 π 0Having worked in the natural building world previously, Iβm so intrigued by straw panels. Massive labor requirements has been a big barrier to low-carbon, natural building methods - so panelized construction that bridges that gap is exciting.
30.01.2025 14:44 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Not that achieving all of these things AND keeping a project within budget and schedule is in any way easy, but it should be an aspiration if we want to build things that make the most of our limited resources and will last well into the future.
29.01.2025 13:32 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0But the most egregious sin in the high performance world if you ask me (not that anyone did), is to continue building uninspired, soulless boxes. Ugly things just donβt last. Period.
I donβt care what your carbon footprint or energy consumption are if what you build isnβt beautiful and functional.
#passivehouse is cool and all, but itβs still basically a resource intensive way for property owners with above average means to hedge against the climate crisis for themselves while at the same time exacerbating the issue.
Our βhighest performanceβ projects are our most resource intensive by far.
Lately, thinking not only about how to design healthy and high performance, but also how to design for regeneration of our landscapes. Pretty much every project we have any more is in some way directly impacted by pollution (air in SLC, extraction in Ohio, former superfund in MT).
29.01.2025 13:22 β π 7 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Rusty old relic on the site of our newest project. About 1/3 of the property had been clear cut, at least 2/3 may have old abandoned underground mines below, and this gas well sits on one corner.
Now that all the extracting is done, we get to build a house.
And infill residential projects like this one I worked on circa 2015-16. A lot of scrutiny from the historic board, but zero lot lines, engagement with the street, alley parking out of site.
07.12.2024 15:59 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0I miss the walkability and vibrancy of Cincinnati, especially on inversion days that keep me stranded inside. Blink was a great reminder of that.
07.12.2024 15:57 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0While Iβm rambling, the way that healthy, #lowcarbon building is talked about, trending toward overly academic and inaccessible for so many who should understand it - builders, tradespeople and owners - is a big obstacle. Even for us who already spend a lot of time and energy trying to keep up.
03.12.2024 15:24 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Lots of different ideas in this space, loosely planning some small scale experimentation for 2025z
#architecture #mushrooms #naturalbuilding
Stinking orange oyster mushrooms
Mushrooms on a log
Wine cap mushrooms
Mushrooms growing on tree
And Iβm still not giving up on the idea of #mycelium based building products.
Having worked with #rammedearth , #strawbale , #limeplaster , #hempcrete over the last 10+ years and knowing that labor is the biggest challenge w/ #naturalbuilding , I donβt see why thereβs not potential.
#mushrooms
Building site for cabin in the woods.
Like for an upcoming cabin in the woods of SE Ohio. It feels sacrilegious to build a home on a site like this thatβs packed full of foam and other synthetic and toxic materials.
Also working on cleaning up of our specifications to prioritize clean, healthy materials throughout.
#architecture
Thinking a lot about low carbon alternatives to the foam-based building products that have worked well for us in recent years (ie, ICF and SIPs).
Looking for opportunities to use CLT, straw panels, bio-based ICF, etc. More prefab and modularization, less carbon.
#architecture #passivehouse
just poking around and hoping this place is the alternative to the other place that Iβve been looking for
17.11.2024 21:11 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0