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Hank Louis and architecture graduate student work on rammed
earth home in Bluff, Utah.
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Credit: Photo courtesy of College of Architecture + Planning. |
July 13, 2004 -- A home University of Utah architecture
graduate students built for Rosie Joe and her family in Bluff,
Utah, a small town located in the San Juan River Valley, will
be dedicated in a Navajo ceremony on Sunday, July 18, at noon.
The site, located in southwestern Utah, is 273 miles from Salt
Lake City and can be reached by traveling 16 miles south of Bluff,
on Highway 191, then five miles east on San Juan County Road 443.
Eight U students built the house spring semester according to
their own design, with assistance from the Utah Development Corporation,
Dennis Caulfield Construction, a handful of experts and several
former College of Architecture +Planning (CA+P) students. Adjunct
Architecture Professor Hank Louis led the CA+P Design Build Studio
course as well as obtained permits and secured donated materials
and funds.
The architecture work with the American Indians in San Juan County
is part of the College of Architecture + Planning's Design Build
Studio. Students receive practical, hands-on experience implementing
their design work, assisting with planning and zoning, learning
about construction site safety and working with community agencies
and private donors. Students also learn about affordability, energy-efficiency
and sustainability of materials. Louis hopes the program will
eventually be more akin to Auburn University's intensive Rural
Studio program, established by the late Samuel Mockbee, with whom
Louis worked. Two years ago Louis' students completed the Kunga
House, a five-bedroom home for a nine-member, Tibetan immigrant
family. The first straw bale home to be built in Salt Lake City,
the structure includes many value-added extras-wheelchair accessibility,
a Tibetan Buddhist shrine and recycled and sustainable materials-incorporated
into the design. One local news story called the project "The
House That Decency Built."
Last year Louis' graduate students built "Studio Squared,"
a mobile dwelling unit that was constructed in a campus parking
lot and then moved to Bluff. The combined apartment-workspace,
which will be used by future visiting professors, includes 350
square feet of outdoor deck workspace. Part of one wall is comprised
of a glass garage door, which provides natural lighting, but also
raises to allow the bed on castor rollers to slide out onto the
deck, for sleeping under the stars.
Rosie Joe's Bluff house is built of an old, but more recently
used, energy-efficient material known as rammed earth. The 18-inch
thick walls are made from compressed sand and clay dug and sifted
onsite. The south wall is comprised of windows of all sizes that
the students found, collected and installed. The roof is welded
re-bar that butterflies into the air to become a water catchment
system. Some interior walls are finished with clear acrylic, revealing
packed, loose straw insulation. Interior dividing walls are faced
with discarded road and highway signs, scavenged sheet metal and
patina flashing metal. "In such a remote area, nothing can
be thrown away-everything is overtaxed, with embodied energy,"
says Louis. The ceiling is made of begged wood pallets, the gaps
covered by neutral-colored canvas.
The University students left behind family and friends and moved
to Bluff for all of spring semester to build the house they designed
fall semester. They lived in "dorms"-Louis' 1905 historic
sandstone home.
Bluff's rural location brought challenges to Louis' students'
most recent project-extreme heat and cold and no electrical power
for tools. They faced the additional challenge of maintaining
their other course work.
The Bluff Design Build Studio Program will continue next spring
with the creation and construction of another house. According
to CA+P Dean Brenda Scheer, "This is a special on-going program
of the college, which reflects our principles of good design that
is good for people and good for the environment."
For more information on the Navajo dedication ceremony, contact
Hank Louis 801-557-4987.
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