Archive for the ‘exhibitions and events’ Category

Ecobuild – 3rd to 5th March

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Ecobuild is a free exhibition at Earls Court, London, from 3rd to 5th March 2009, which covers all sorts of green and sustainable building topics. There are exhibits on renovation, zero carbon houses, solar energy, natural materials and more. There will be seminars as well, on water, regulation, and urban planning amongst other things. Entry to the exhibition is free, and I hope to be able to cover it in much the same way I did Grand Designs Live last year.


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Grand Designs Live is back!

Friday, September 12th, 2008

If you missed Grand Designs Live in London earlier in the year, do not despair! It’s back, but this time at the NEC in Birmingham, from 10-12 October 2008. The show is open from 10am until 6pm each day, and tickets are £13 in advance, £18 on the door.

Each day there will be five seminars, from Grand Designers: Living the Dream, where people featured on Grand Designs talk about their experience, to Perfect Financial and Project Planning, which does what it says on the tin. There will also be a variety of green seminars about how to make sure your build is environmentally friendly, tips on energy efficiency and designing a green interior.

If it’s anything like the London show was, are will be more exhibitors than you can shake a stick at. I had several days to wander round and see what tickled my fancy, but if you’re only there for a day it helps to be focused on what it is you need to see.

Sadly, I shan’t be going as I’m way too busy at the moment, but if you have even just a passing interest in self-build, DIY, or renovation, it will be well worth a look!

ETech goes sustainable

Monday, August 4th, 2008

O’Reilly’s Emerging Technology conference, aka ETech, is going all sustainable on us with the title of 2009’s event revealed as Living, Reinvented: The Technology of Abundance and Constraints. An excerpt rom today’s Call for Participation:

The 2009 O’Reilly Emerging Technology Conference will focus on exploring the emerging trends in the technologies that affect our everyday lives, including:

* City Tech: Our cities are growing, getting bigger faster than ever before. People are rushing to them in search of economic and social opportunity—jobs, urban living, and access to culture. How can technology help us create livable, prosperous, sustainable cities? What should mass transit look like? How can we infuse urban infrastructure with sustainability? How are cities using citizens’ data to become smarter? What can economics tell us about the way urban populations will change and behave?

* Materials & Mechanics: Mechanics and materials develop hand-in-hand. The creation of a new, lighter metal enables iPhones and Mars Explorers. We’ll examine the latest in mechanics and the materials that enable new developments. What mechanisms will be possible? How will the coming age of materials change our clothes, our products, and our everyday lives? Can they be made the cradle2cradle way or will we simply be clogging our landfills with ingenious, meticulously crafted waste?

* Geek Family: Digital native mothers and fathers are starting their own families. How is that changing home technology? Education technology? What does the future geek home look like and how does it function?

* Nomadism & Shedworking: As cities and their suburbs rapidly increase their footprint, there are some who reject the crowded living conditions, but take advantage of the connectedness. They adopt a high-tech lifestyle within the constraints of a smaller space or take their posessions and their bits with them on the road, to the farthest reaches of the globe. How do they do this and what can we learn from them?

* Sustainable Life: The American lifestyle is unsustainable. How do we move to one-Earth economy? What are Europeans doing? Will Dubai be the trendsetter with its newest sustainable city? How will a renewed interest in environmental design affect us? Last year’s keynoter Alex Steffen posited that it would be technology driving the change, not a restriction of habits or an energy diet. Right now the abundant world is being changed by rising oil and medical costs, forcing change. What technology will break through?

* Life Hacking & Information Overload: We are bombarded with too much information, but at least some of it is relevant. What are the tools that we can use to process it? How can we identify the subset we actually care about? How do we identify the necessary bits of information that makes us more productive? Can we use cognitive science to help us deal with modern day living? What does neuroscience tell us about our brains and how we should handle learning and processing? Will ubicomp be able to help us stave off the overload or will it hasten our doom?

I am tempted to propose a couple of talks, one to fit into the Life Hacking & Information Overload category about the psychology of email, which I’m doing a lot of work on at the moment. The other would fit maybe into City Tech category and would be about designing for the indoors cat. There’s a pretty big overlap between geeks and cats, I think I can be fairly sure that there won’t be anyone else proposing a Cat Tech talk. And I very much hope that Alex Johnson proposes a talk on Shedworking – he’s got to be a world expert on the subject!

Be2Camp

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

The last week has been rather busy with work: I’m writing an article for The Guardian on the psychology of email, which has been a lot of fun, but rather all-consuming with lots of interviews and reading and, oh irony of ironies, email. I’m also still recovering from sleep depravation caused by some hideously noisy neighbours, so the blogging here has been rather quieter than usual.

However, I found out from Martin Brown, via Twitter, about an event planned for the 10th October in London, Be2Camp, which is focusing its attention on the built environment and Web 2.0. It’s going to be an ‘unconference‘, so the content will be shaped by the participants rather than having a set agenda. Their site has just launched, so if you’re interested in the event, do join up and take part in the discussions.

For me, this is going to be a fun and exciting event as it brings together my long-term fascination for (and work with) social software with my new-found interest in building, urban planning and built communities. I’ve put the date in my diary, and I hope to be able to take part on the day. I know I’ll certainly learn a lot from the other attendees, particularly those who come from a built environment background!

GDL08: The House That Kevin Built – In all its glory

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

In the closing hours of Grand Designs Live, I finally got a chance to get up close and personal to The House That Kevin Built. It was a lot of fun to get in there and have a look round, especially as I was one of the last allowed in, so I got the place to myself for a while, hence the huge number of photos.

The House That Kevin Built

The House That Kevin Built

The House That Kevin Built

Here you can see right up and under the cladding.

The House That Kevin Built

And the rain screen from the lower, unrendered parts of the ModCell storey.

(more…)

GDL08: The House That Kevin Built – Scaff’s down

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

By the end of Friday, the seventh day, the Kevin’s house was starting to look complete. The roof was waterproof and complete with skylights. Windows were in and glazed, and the cladding applied to the sides of the house.

The House That Kevin Built

The House That Kevin Built

The House That Kevin Built

The cladding panels for the upper half of the house were made on site by a computerised flatbed router. I suspect that they could be a fabulous habitat for bees, and possibly house martens too, as they provide a nice sheltered space under the slats for nest-building. I’m not sure that was the intention though…

The House That Kevin Built

The House That Kevin Built

How many camera folk does it take to do a practice run of a piece to camera? Six, it would seem. I love the camera on the enormous boom – that’s how they get those fabulous, swoopy shots.

By the end of the day, the scaffolding was down and the house was revealed in all it’s glory.

The House That Kevin Built

And from certain angles, you can start to get a feel for how this would look if it were in a residential setting, instead of on a patch of grass in between a massive exhibition hall and a hotel.

The House That Kevin Built

GDL08: The House That Kevin Built – Topping out

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

I was so excited that I happpened to be around for the topping out ceremony of The House That Kevin Built. Kevin McCloud explained to the assembled crowd that a ‘topping out’ ceremony is held when the highest point of a structure has been put up. The builders take up a leafy sprig of oak, or whatever wood has been used in construction, and nail it to the very apex of the structure.

In this case, they had a sheaf of thatch prepared so that it could stand up upon the top of the roof. Kevin joked that it was the responsibility of the youngest and handsomest of the builders to top out, but that that wasn’t him. Youngest, maybe not, but I’d argue about handsomest.

Of course, a libation has to be made which, along side the offering of the sheaf, is intended to thank the gods, goddesses and spirits of forest and field for giving up their bounty to allow the building of the house.

Bottles of champers were distributed amongst the build crew, liberally shaken and then opened.

Despite protestations from the producer that Health & Safety would have a fit if there was any drinking on-site, a toast is made, and the topping out ceremony is complete.

He smiled just after this, honest.

GDL08: The House That Kevin Built – Up to the apex

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

Throughout Grand Designs Live, Kevin McCloud and a team of builders, celebrities, and TV crew built a house in the Grand Village, with ModCell’s straw bales panels and vertical thatch on the ground floor, and the Facit building system used for the first floor and roof. Although I missed the very first stages of building, I kept as much of an eye on the house as possible.

The original brief was pretty simple:

To design and build a sustainable house, using traditional materials and techniques alongside cutting-edge 21st century technology which underpins [Kevin's] green principles.

When I arrived, on the morning of Day 4, the bottom storey, built by ModCell, was already complete and work had started on Facit’s half. The straw bales panels were all in place, but had not all been lime rendered. The glazing and window/door frames were also absent, but you could already get a sense of how the house was doing to look.

One panel was clad in vertical thatch. I heard that this was the first time that vertical thatch had ever been used in the UK, and whilst it looks kinda cool I have my doubts about it. Firstly, the individual stalks of thatch come out really easy, and are very tempting to pull at for the fidgety-fingered. This leads me to believe that the thatch would thin out very quickly, and the more thatch is pulled out, the less tightly packed the remaining straw or reed is, and the easier that comes out… Secondly, it would be a haven for small insects and spiders, which is fine on the outside, but less keen on that internally.

The other side of the house, showing rendered ModCell panels and one left open for later glazing.

The second storey, supplied by Facit goes up really quickly.

The Accoya wood doors and windows, from Westgate Joinery, go in. Accoya is basically softwood that has been treated with acetic anhydride at temperature and under pressure to give it the properties of hardwood. This means that it can be sustainably sourced, and the treatment makes it incredibly durable. I had a chat with a chap who was a real Accoya fan, and he told me that the manufacturer’s guarantee is 30 years, with the importer adding another 10 onto that – that’s showing a fair amount of confidence! This build was the first time he’d seen Accoya in the flesh, as it were, and he was getting really quite excited about it.

I have to say, the idea of a sustainable hardwood substitute really is quite exciting because it would reduce the need to cut down slow-growing hardwoods or use environmentally unkind treatments for softwoods, all of which is much better for the planet. Even the by-product of the hardening process is recyclable – it’s acetic acid, or as we usually call it, vinegar. Not that you’d want to put this vinegar on your chips…

The build progresses, and the roof goes on.

The holes at the top are for piping in insulation.

Work goes on inside, hidden away from nosey bloggers, sadly.

The Facit panels for the apex of the roof are so light that they could actually be carried by one person.

Kevin McCloud setting up for recording.

Kevin indulges in a bit of pole dancing.

Kevin does his piece to camera. I wasn’t close enough to be able to hear what he was saying, but I asked Finlay White from Modcell about the panel that he’s standing in front of, as I really couldn’t figure out what it was supposed to be. Apparently, it’s a silica aerogel window which soaks up solar heat during the day and releases it during the night. According to the Channel 4 site, this particular panel was of Cabot Nanogel.

More photos in the next post!

GDL08: ModCell and The House That Kevin Built

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

Right at the end of Grand Designs Live, as the exhibition was shutting up shop, I finally got the chance to have a look around the House That Kevin Built (big post to come about that soon!). Whilst I was snapping photos, I got to talk to Finley White from ModCell, whose company put up the bottom half of the house.

The House That Kevin Built

The ModCell bits are the ground floor panels you can see either rendered or, on the left-hand wall, glazed to show the straw off. Glazing the panels is not normal practice, but it was nice to be able to see the straw inside in this instance. Essentially, these are wooden frames (sustainably sourced, of course) that have been filled with straw bales and then rendered with a lime render, making them super-insulating and vermin-proof. All this is done in a ‘flying factory’ near to the build site using local materials to reduce the amount of transportation required.

The panels can then be assembled very quickly and easily on-site and as they are already rendered, the structure can be made water-tight very easily. Finlay also explained to me that builders generally dislike having straw bales kicking about as they have to be kept bone dry throughout the build, have a tendency to shed straw which then gets everywhere, and are a bit of a pain in the neck. ModCell, on the other hand, deals with all the straw away from the build, keeping the site tidy. As all the rendering is done in the ‘factory’, you’re also less at the mercy of the weather – joy to any British self-builder’s ears.

I was really impressed with the idea, and it’s a real shame that I didn’t get to talk to ModCell earlier in the week as I would have loved to have done some video with them. They have lots more information on their website, including a load of photos from the Grand Designs build.

GDL08: Container living

Monday, May 19th, 2008

If you’re looking for a quick build that’s a little different, why not live in a shipping container? Already waterproof, and able to be sited almost anywhere that’s flat – only the corners rest on the ground so you don’t need to lay lots of concrete – you can whip up a container house in no time. I had a look round an empty 20ft container on the Lendon Containers stand, and they are surprisingly large with a lot more headroom than I expected. A bit long and thin, perhaps, but join a few together and there’d be more than enough space. And they can easily be stacked – containers on ships are often piled up to 14 high – so there’s no problem if you want a two storey house.

Price-wise, they’re not all that expensive. The nice chap from Lendon said they went for £4k for a 20ft (if my memory serves) although you can probably get them on eBay cheaper if you want to fit and install them yourself. I’m not sure how much a whole build would cost, if you were to make an entire house out of them, but I suspect it’s much more affordable than bricks and mortar.

An empty shipping container

Indeed, GDL had three containers decked out as a bedroom, lounge and full bedsit, and stacked three high just to show you how easy it is. Sort of like giant, habitable lego. The beat-up exteriors look great in an urban setting, but if you’re out in the countryside do you really want a heap of rust in your garden? Well, that’s easily fixed – containers lend themselves well to being clad in whatever material you want, and you can even put a living roof on them to soften the angular look even further.

A pile of shipping containers

The bedroom container was bigger than our bedroom is here, and although it was a bit longer and narrower, they got more furniture in than we can, so a container wins in the “vs our flat” challenge. Standard width and height is 8ft by 8ft 6 ins, and length can be 10 ft, 20 ft or 40 ft. One day I’ll have to work out what our flat’s square footage is, so I can do a proper comparison.

Container bedroom

The lounge container is probably smaller than our lounge, but then, ours has a kitchen in it too. Put two containers together and whip out the middle wall and you’d be laughing, though. Containers can be well insulated – although there’s a trade off as the thicker the insulation the more space you lose inside – and can have windows, doors, shelving and air-conditioning fitted, so they’re easy enough to turn into a useful space.

Container lounge

And if you want a speedy guest bedsit, or you want to live on-site whilst you’re building your house, there’s just enough room in a 20ft container to do that.

Container bedsit

I was thinking the other night… ok, fantasising, if I’m honest… that what I’d do would be to have a container on-site to securely store all the materials that come early, to keep them dry and safe from acquisitive hands, and then once the build was done, move it to the back garden, clad it in cedar or something else that looks nice, bung a living roof on top, and bingo – instant garden shed!