Ferrocement Cabin/Shelter in Slab City, CA- HOW TO BUILD IT

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  • Опубликовано: 24 дек 2024

Комментарии • 77

  • @relaxshacksDOTcom
    @relaxshacksDOTcom  3 года назад +16

    "When lumber is too expensive......"

    • @cleoharper1842
      @cleoharper1842 3 года назад +1

      Shameless appreciation moment:
      Your projects are always so awesome. I always find myself diving into one of Deek's rabbit holes whenever I do some research on what you're currently working on. And your ability to teach things clearly in short videos is commendable. Thank you for your enriching content. I freaking love you, man. But not in that weird way.

    • @prototype9000
      @prototype9000 3 месяца назад

      rebar is even more expensive

  • @chezmoi42
    @chezmoi42 3 года назад +16

    My dad was a contractor who specialized in concrete work. His trick for anchoring things like this rebar into cement was to sink in a bottle, neck down, into the spot, then when it was set you break out the bottom of the bottle, place your upright plumb, and fill in with more cement. For a porch railing you can use beer bottles, but for something big like this a wine bottle might be better.

  • @Oldaker7
    @Oldaker7 2 года назад +6

    My grandpa built a house similar to this set up. It was done with the chicken wire nailed to the outside of house and covered it with cement. It is still standing today and I'm 45 years old.

  • @levinpugsley9256
    @levinpugsley9256 2 года назад +6

    I’ve used poultry netting with rebar, hardware cloth, and metal lathe for ferrocement structures. The metal lathe was by far the easiest to get the cement to stick on the underside ceiling, IMO the most challenging part to keep the cement in place during the initial process. Tarp and having someone on the inside is a very important tip, thumbs up 👍🏼!

  • @Tsiri09
    @Tsiri09 3 года назад +10

    That's pretty cool. Looks like in the coming days, we're all gonna have to be creative with housing.

  • @seanavery7265
    @seanavery7265 3 года назад +2

    Happy independence Day for tomorrow ,love and thanks from England.🇺🇸

  • @annettefournier9655
    @annettefournier9655 3 года назад +8

    That's a pretty darn good off the cuff drawing IMHO.

    • @chezmoi42
      @chezmoi42 3 года назад +5

      Deek's an artist. You can catch up with some of his work here and there in his videos, like this one: ruclips.net/video/QFjF6INkqVM/видео.html
      Or there's more here:
      www.google.com/search?source=univ&tbm=isch&q=deek+diedricksen+art

    • @relaxshacksDOTcom
      @relaxshacksDOTcom  3 года назад +3

      @@chezmoi42 Thanks! (both of you)

  • @ruthdoyle9085
    @ruthdoyle9085 2 месяца назад +1

    To waterproof it. .. mix mortar with 1/2 the water required and the rest paint…mix with a drill and it should fluff up like shaving cream…paint it on with a brush… you can also paint with latex, add cloth on top (bed sheet) and immediately repaint while wet…then add paint layers until the cloth disappears…sprinkling dry mortar mix on it help to give it a concrete look and feel…

  • @louisestagnetto8754
    @louisestagnetto8754 3 года назад +2

    So glad to see you're filming again. Have missed the videos. Covid has been around for too long !! Look forward to the next one 😀

  • @reptillian91
    @reptillian91 3 года назад +2

    Oh man that seesaw brings back memories!! Love it. Kids today will never have a chance to get hurt on these :P

  • @mikeingram-bh2lh
    @mikeingram-bh2lh Год назад +3

    How can you make the floor ferro cement so in a flood the whole house will float up. In holland they have some houses that will float up in a flood , but they are not cement.

  • @docink6175
    @docink6175 3 года назад +4

    back in the 70's mother earth news did this using bamboo.. to make a bigger structure you make 2 hoops on the ground connected with another hoop, once the skin is applied on the outside you can remove the inside legs.. There was a company in NE Florida in the early 90's who built sheds using plywood to make an arch and covered it with a similar system but they used a large roll of fiber membrane and applied the concrete with a gun, the one I saw was 4sheets wide with about a 10-12' peak

    • @relaxshacksDOTcom
      @relaxshacksDOTcom  3 года назад +2

      Yes, bamboo IS pretty amazing! Took some video when I was in Hong Kong of the bamboo scaffolding they'd use while working on buildings- some of it was 20 stories tall!

    • @AliAbdullah-oi3wc
      @AliAbdullah-oi3wc 3 года назад +1

      how would I bend the rebar to a hoop? I know of simple tools that will bend, but they are more for 90 degree angles

    • @rossr6616
      @rossr6616 3 месяца назад

      ⁠​⁠@@AliAbdullah-oi3wcharbor freight has tubing bending jigs with rollers so probably would work for small D rebar

  • @Christ_on_the_River
    @Christ_on_the_River 2 года назад +4

    Basalt rebar … 300ft coil of #3 equivalent for around $100 is lightweight and compact for transport. Won’t rust since it’s made from volcanic rock

    • @slaplapdog
      @slaplapdog Год назад +1

      It's not commonly available here, but the fiberglass rebar is.

    • @rossr6616
      @rossr6616 3 месяца назад +1

      @@slaplapdogwhere is “here” ?

    • @rossr6616
      @rossr6616 3 месяца назад

      where is this available?

  • @kmonnier
    @kmonnier 3 года назад +2

    I made concrete piggy banks for my siblings Christmas presents one year using expanded metal lath and mortar. You are very right about the squeezing through needing to be troweled.

    • @relaxshacksDOTcom
      @relaxshacksDOTcom  3 года назад +1

      Wow- pretty cool! Would love to see those somehow

    • @rossr6616
      @rossr6616 3 месяца назад

      as a prank? so they couldn’t break da bank?

  • @susannebemis3311
    @susannebemis3311 3 года назад

    what a fab birthday present ! Deek is back!

  • @penguinchick6563
    @penguinchick6563 3 года назад +2

    I like the idea a lot! 👍

  • @veronicasmith1147
    @veronicasmith1147 3 года назад +4

    Good stuff💙💞💖

  • @RMacca
    @RMacca 3 года назад +1

    I was just recently trying to research structures similar to this. Great timing!

    • @emeraldfox7175
      @emeraldfox7175 3 года назад

      You can do the same thing with the 16ft cattle panels from tractor supply

  • @chuk11011
    @chuk11011 3 года назад +3

    Should be easy to form a fireplace off the side, even form smokestack with it maybe, and I like the saturated sacks idea!

    • @rossr6616
      @rossr6616 3 месяца назад

      refractory cement maybe a good idea for permanence of firebox?

  • @emeraldfox7175
    @emeraldfox7175 3 года назад +3

    You can do the same thing with the 16 ft. 25 dollar cattle panels from tractor supply

    • @AliAbdullah-oi3wc
      @AliAbdullah-oi3wc 3 года назад

      I dont have cattle panels in my country. What size rebar do you think it is?

  • @DeweyKentM
    @DeweyKentM 3 года назад +1

    I like the flat wall and overhang up front, but I think a curved airstream-like back wall would be pretty sweet. If one were to attempt such a complex shape, do you think vertical rebar bent to the center of the last full arch would be the way to go, or would full arches suspended at different angles and tied together be more structurally sound?

    • @relaxshacksDOTcom
      @relaxshacksDOTcom  3 года назад +2

      Yes- could easily do that too- good point- I was just think more so in terms of the ease of working in windows into traditional vertical walls in this case.

  • @mistyblue526
    @mistyblue526 2 года назад +3

    Cant old towels, blankets be used instead of coffee sacks?

  • @dirtgirl9074
    @dirtgirl9074 3 года назад

    rebar... rebarb.... reBarbie..... suddenly I am seeing a bunch of old barbies set in a concrete Quonset hut wall. A little too much cabin fever this week. Looks like a cool idea. We still have a number of Quonsets around my town from the olden days. Most have become storage sheds but some are little houses or offices.

  • @jerrywhidby.
    @jerrywhidby. Год назад

    I want to try making a fence wall using concrete canvas. Then plant creeping figs to cover it up. Maybe some oval see throughs in the wall.

  • @CaptainPhilosophical
    @CaptainPhilosophical 2 года назад +1

    If you don't use a footing how far should the rebar be driven into ground?

  • @KaleidoscopeJunkie
    @KaleidoscopeJunkie 3 года назад +2

    Free metal bed rails and box springs online.....
    The fabric from box springs can be used in place of woven bags.

    • @relaxshacksDOTcom
      @relaxshacksDOTcom  3 года назад +2

      I like it as you can find that stuff everywhere, and its already garbage

  • @sail4free1
    @sail4free1 3 года назад +2

    We've been building "Sanctuary One" at The Slabs for a few years now -- 18' wide; 16' front end to back end wall; 12' tall. At this point the 10-faceted roof is completely done at *very* low cost using OSB and aluminized roof coating over 3' long chunks of 2x4 put together in "rigid arch" fashion with plywood/OSB glue plates and galvanized 2" box nails. The one end facing the street (Coachella Canal Road) is completely done with three windows -- storm shutters which double as shade awnings for this west-facing wall, etc. :)
    Last "winter" we built what is likely the nicest and most permanent "gopher hole" at The Slabs (Spyder at The California Ponderosa can bring you up to speed). It is a perforated 50 gallon plastic drum installed vertically in a hand-dug hole and backfilled with fist-size and larger rocks we hand-picked from the nearby desert. Then I put down four layers of old plastic tarp, built a "garden wall" from dry-stacked cinder blocks (two rows above grade) and filled the cores with smaller rocks, beer bottles, wine bottles, rebar *and* hand-mixed concrete in a five-gallon plastic bucket. Then all the loose dirt from the dig was put inside the garden wall. The idea is that blackwater would go down below and graywater could be used it irrigate whatever is planted inside the garden wall. :)

    • @sail4free1
      @sail4free1 3 года назад +1

      @She-Wolf -- We haven't taken any video of our build yet. I have seen it in a video or two made by others but I don't remember which ones. All we have at this point are regular pics. :)

  • @emerson6535
    @emerson6535 3 года назад +3

    How do you bend the rebar?

    • @relaxshacksDOTcom
      @relaxshacksDOTcom  3 года назад +4

      You can drive posts (or anything similar into the ground), as bending points to work the metal around..... almost like a jig. Its almost the same way by which you more-safely break firewood/campfire branches by sticking them between two trees and using one tree as leverage for the break.

  • @cindyboard7816
    @cindyboard7816 3 года назад +1

    Interesting stuff!!!

  • @sdthyng
    @sdthyng Год назад

    coffee sacks? Why not old towels, t shirts, etc soaked in cement mix?

  • @sail4free1
    @sail4free1 3 года назад +1

    We have 1,100 watts of solar panels now and are pre-wired for another 250 watts. This should make it easy enough to run a solar-powered small batch concrete mixer going forward. Concrete is a good choice at The Slabs = thermal mass *and* resistant to fire which seems to be one of the constant variables there. :(

  • @emerson6535
    @emerson6535 3 года назад +1

    Please make more videos!

    • @relaxshacksDOTcom
      @relaxshacksDOTcom  3 года назад +2

      More coming you- YT has just been messing with my channel the last two years which has killed a lot of my reach through their algorithms and restrictions- which can be, er, discouraging.....

  • @EcovillageOutlaws
    @EcovillageOutlaws 3 года назад +1

    Are you in Slab City now?

  • @Tsiri09
    @Tsiri09 3 года назад +3

    Looks like you're drawing a Conestoga hut. Only with concrete.

  • @guillaumemartin8864
    @guillaumemartin8864 4 месяца назад

    Vidéo intéressante. Je pense qu il serait possible de mettre un film geotextile par dessus l armature en acier pour ensuite faire du béton projeté ( en fait du mortier pas du béton) avec une machine qui projette le ciment et quand l intérieur est réalisé il suffit d enlever le film geotextile et projeté le ciment par m extérieur au lieu de tout faire à la main et à la truelle.

  • @LetsFingGo
    @LetsFingGo Год назад

    when there is no lumber.
    Aussie pioneers in the far outback made homes like this using hessian (burlap) bags because, well,, there was nothing else available.

  • @lockedin60
    @lockedin60 3 года назад +1

    Not making light of the recent tragedy in Surfside but if people were not aware of rebar and concrete building materials they will be now. Maybe a build like this will give people a new perspective.

  • @sirpacolour397
    @sirpacolour397 2 года назад

    Is these Permanent material

  • @hollysegroves1717
    @hollysegroves1717 Год назад

    How come nobody tries to make earth bag homes out there??

  • @Jarjarjar21
    @Jarjarjar21 3 года назад

    How cool.

  • @Wawiya
    @Wawiya 2 года назад

    very nice, it reminds me of a wigwam

  • @johnsexton3841
    @johnsexton3841 3 года назад +1

    Neat!

  • @huntercartwright791
    @huntercartwright791 3 года назад +1

    Flipping cool……

  • @adderkay
    @adderkay 3 года назад +1

    Picturnary king...🤴

  • @rasheedp4140
    @rasheedp4140 Год назад

    Can i get one dwg

  • @bygodsgracejourneytohealin8368

    Fabric concrete... or concrete canvas

  • @rasheedp4140
    @rasheedp4140 Год назад

  • @evilgoogleevilgoogle3855
    @evilgoogleevilgoogle3855 2 года назад

    Ferrocement

  • @phillipjackson5727
    @phillipjackson5727 2 года назад +1

    Lumber down 50%....just in time.

  • @robertwagner2079
    @robertwagner2079 10 месяцев назад

    This is the most least interesting thing at East Jesus....