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27 septembre 2011

Une maison, en 4 mois, pour 3000 livres!

Our £3,000 Hobbit house: The family home dug from a hillside and built with scraps scavenged from skips

By Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 2:26 AM on 22nd September 2011

 

Fed up with huge mortgage payments, Simon Dale decided to take matters into his own hands – literally.

Armed with only a chisel, a chainsaw and a hammer, the 32-year-old moved his family to a hillside in Wales and started digging.

The result is a wooden eco-home – constructed in four months and costing  just £3,000 – which would look perfectly at ease alongside the Hobbit houses in The Lord Of The Rings.

 
Finished article: Simon Dale's family home, made with his bare hands

Finished article: Simon Dale's family home which he built in four months for a cost of £3,000

 
The moon rises on the house which is roofed with grass and nestles in its woodland surroundings

Nestled: The moon rises on the house which is roofed with grass and blends in to its woodland surroundings

 

 

 
 
Home from home: In just four months the house was ready

Cosy home: The house is heated by a wood burner and a solar panel provides power

Mr Dale, who has no experience in carpentry or architecture, created his sustainable family home using scrap wood for floors, materials scavenged from skips and by diverting water from a nearby spring.

And while he was doing the building work, his wife Jasmine Saville and their two toddler children camped in the nearby countryside.

He said: ‘Being your own have-a-go architect is a lot of fun and allows you to create and enjoy something which is part of yourself and the land rather than, at worst, a mass-produced box designed for maximum profit and the convenience of the construction industry.

‘Building from natural materials does away with producers’ profits and the cocktail of carcinogenic poisons that fill most modern buildings.’

Cosy: Inside the finished house, with windows and floors as well as a staircase Sustainable: Simon Dale, who had no experience as a carpenter or architect when he started the project, used lime plaster and wood from the surrounding area

 
Woodland view: The house is fully sustainable

Woodland view: Mr Dale put the timber frame up first, then the roof, so his family could be sheltered while he carried out the rest of the work

 

 
 
 
Hobbit house: The finished article sits in the Welsh hillside and is almost hidden from view

Hobbit house: The finished article sits in the Welsh hillside and is almost hidden from view

The family struck lucky searching for a site for their dream project. In return for looking after the area, the owner of the woods gave them their plot for free.

After digging into the hillside, Mr Dale – with the help of his father-in-law, a builder – first constructed the building’s timber frame.

The roof, which came next, has a layer of straw bales for insulation and is covered  with sheets of plastic to make it waterproof.

Finally it is covered with a layer of earth, which ensures the house blends perfectly into its surroundings.

Finished article: Simon Dale, with wife Jasmine Saville, outside their home, just four months after starting work

Woodland home: Simon Dale, with wife Jasmine Saville and their two children outside their home, just four months after starting work

 
 

Once the outer shell was complete, the family made an interior wall from straw bales stacked on dry-stone walling and staked together with hazel sticks.

Once the walls were up a sub-floor made from pallets was laid, with floorboards put down on top.

Miss Saville, writing on her husband’s website, said: ‘Some past experience, lots of reading and self-belief gave  us the courage of our conviction that we wanted to build our own home in natural surroundings.

‘For us, one choice led to another and each time we  took the plunge events conspired to assist us in our mission. There were times of stress and exhaustion, but  definitely no regrets and plenty of satisfaction.’

 
Window on the woods: The cosy sitting room looks out through the conservatory to the surrounding woodland

Window on the woods: The cosy sitting room looks out through the conservatory to the surrounding woodland

 
From scratch: Simon Dale building his 'hobbit house'

From scratch: Simon Dale building his 'hobbit house'

 

 

 
Foundations: The house taking shape after putting palletes on top of straw bales ready for floor boards
From rubble: The beginning of the house...
 

Before and after:  View from the unfinished window (left) and piles of stones on the house site

 

 
Foundations: The house taking shape after putting palletes on top of straw bales ready for floor boards

Foundations: The house takes shape with palettes laid as a sub floor, ready for floor boards

 
 
Helping hand: Simon Dale's son helps out gathering wood

Helping hand: Simon Dale's son helps out gathering wood

 

 
 
Family task: Simon Dale moved his family to Wales and started building

Family task: Simon Dale moved his family to Wales and started building

 
 

 

 
 

 

 

As well as being made from sustainable material the Hobbit house, as it is dubbed by locals, has lime plaster on its walls instead of cement, a compost toilet, a fridge cooled by air from beneath the foundations and solar panels for power.

Mr Dale said: ‘This sort of  life is about living in harmony with both the natural world and ourselves, doing things simply and using appropriate levels of technology.’

Since building his house, Mr Dale is following the design to construct the first home in the Lammas Village, Wales’s first eco-development.

For more information on building low impact homes, visit www.simondale.net

 
Plans: Drawings for the hobbit house

Plans: Drawings for the hobbit house

 

 
Insulation: Straw, membrane and earth make up the walls

Insulation: Straw, membrane and earth make up the walls

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J
C'est marrant, j'ai rêvé une nuit d'une maison dans ce genre, recouverte de végétaux, de forme arrondie, il y a 30 ans environ.<br /> <br /> C'est les enfants qui doivent être heureux là-dedans, des tas de coins appels à rêverie et jeux.<br /> <br /> Sur l'île de Bora-Bora, j'ai vu toute une forêt avec des drôles de cabanes de toutes les formes construites au sol ou dans les branches d'arbres. J'y ai vécu pendant 3 mois.<br /> <br /> Jamais aussi bien dormi que là-bas. Même les milliers de tupas qui sortaient toutes les nuits en faisant clac-clac sur le terrain n'arrivaient pas à me réveiller ;)<br /> <br /> Ca sent bon la vie ces images. Merci.
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J
Durée de vie? Une seule vie suffit. Et quand bien même s'il faut refaire le toit ts les 10 ans...
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V
j'ai un petit doute sur la sécurité dans une telle maison avec chauffage au bois et la durée de vie aussi m'inquiète, y a t-il du recul sur des constructions plus ancienne ?
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