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Item Information

Edition: Paperback
Format: b&w illustrations and photographs, resource guide, index
Pages: 8 x 10, 480 pages
ISBN: 9781890132576
Publisher: Chelsea Green Publishing
Release Date: 2000-06-01

Online Information
Book Overview
(Reviews)
Table of Contents
Introduction
Excerpt
Other Books By This Author
The New Ecological Home (Paperback)
The Solar House (Paperback)
Related Books
The Straw Bale House
The Hand-Sculpted House
Independent Builder
The New Ecological Home

The Natural House

Daniel D. Chiras

Reviews

"Cream of the crop of building books."
--Tim Rinehart, Woodcrafters Supply

"I believe the single most useful book in Chelsea Green's list is Sam Clark's Independent Builder. Most people contemplate at some point the question of what makes a great place to live. This book will give you the conceptual
tools to understand why some houses are merely buildings, while others are really 'homes' - comfortable, convivial, stimulating to the mind and senses. Like Eliot Coleman, Sam is more interested in ideas than in trendy (often costly) products. An excellent overall design is always a more durable and flexible solution than any particular choice of component. Surprisingly, it's not as hard as most people think to build a house. I say that as someone who has been part of an owner-builder project, from start to finish, and who found Sam's logical and artful book a crucial companion. From drafting layouts to finishing window trim, with this book in hand you can build a house. You can also run a contracting business using Sam's collaborative models. What a pleasure, as an editor, to have been involved in producing a book that has given me so much help as a homesteader."
--Jim Schley's "Staff Pick" as Chelsea Green's "Editor off the grid"

"Subtitled 'Designing and Building a House Your Own Way,' this is the book for anyone thinking about building their own home. It is comprehensive, detailed and covers subjects I have never before seen covered in home building books, like how to make a small house seem bigger, incorporating ergonomics and accessibility, doing your own drawings and scale models, making contracts
that work, and working effectively with professional designers and builders. With detailed diagrams and photographs, this is the most thorough overall guide to building your own home I have ever seen (and I've seen a lot!)."
--Amazon.com

"After offering our course in owner-building at Heartwood for over twenty years, we've found Sam Clark's book to be the ideal textbook. It's not just a carpentry book, not just a design book, not just an engineering book. It's the most concise yet comprehensive guide to all the systems and decisions that go into a home and its creation. In this age of a super-heated economy and opulent excess in trophy homes, it's refreshing to find a resource for building a truly economical and liveable house."
--Will Beemer, from Washington, Massachusetts

"I am planning to build my own small house on a very small budget and have been doing some fairly extensive reading on the subject, but I find I constantly return to Sam Clark's book as my main reference for overall design and planning and I expect to refer to it during the building process as well. Whether dealing with general design philosophy, costing, or the actual building process, Clark's writing is always clear, informative, stimulating and unpatronizing and the drawings and illustrations are also clear and user-friendly. The book is layed out in a logical progression which guides you through the planning process. I have never built a house before, but this book alone would give me the confidence to do so. It is not a construction technique manual, in that it won't teach you how to hammer in a nail, but it will teach you how to design and plan a house for your budget and lifestyle."
--Tamsin Whitehead, from New Hampshire



Author's Summary: Strengths of The Independent Builder




My book is a comprehensive 500 page treatment on housebuilding, a basic manual
useful to owner-buiders, families working with professionals, and to builders.
I think its strengths include:

  1. Technical information, presented clearly, based on underlying principles.
    For example, along with tables for beam sizes, I give the concepts and formulas
    so you can figure sizes yourself. Other examples: heat loss, sound isolation,
    sun angles. I think if you understand the principles, you can design more
    freely, and are less likely to be swayed by fashion or hype.

  2. Design methods: site selection, preliminary design, making scale drawings.

  3. I also emphasize ergonomics, accessibility, small house design, sustainable
    design, and the Pattern Language idea. I have found these disciplines to be
    the most powerful additions to my own design skills in recent years.

  4. Kitchen Design. Probably the strongest chapter in the book, based on my
    30 years experience, and my study of kitchen research going back fifty years.
    I think this chapter will help readers make their kitchens more functional
    and comfortable, and at the same time, simpler.

  5. Business. For families and also for pro builders, the most common and most
    damaging mistakes are business and planning blunders, not construction errors.
    I think the chapters on cost estimating, making good contracts, and hiring
    the right people can help readers have more control over their projects, with
    less stress, confusion, delay, and cost.