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Arched Cabins? Small house living

5.1K views 10 replies 7 participants last post by  LuLuToo  
#1 ·
Has anyone ever heard of them? Their prices seem really fair. I was wondering if anyone can read the materials used or look at the construction and insulation and give some input as to whether or not these would be a decent home? I don't know much of anything about building houses or prices. We have been seriously looking into building a small house or having one built. We have been trying to weigh our options on what would be a reasonable and economical route without just being a tin shack with no insulation. Any input or knowledge would be appreciated!
 
#7 ·
I can't see that it would be cheaper and quicker than conventional studs and trusses. Here they would condensate with out special insulation that is expensive. "Cheap" for a shell, maybe, but making it livable, not so much, odd angles, high ceiling to heat. Not for me....James
 
#8 ·
Thanks everyone for your insight. I figured at their price there would be something wrong or needing more finishing. So is stick building the economic way to go? I know plenty of people build their own home but it doesn't make the idea any less daunting.
 
#9 ·
Blow on foam insulation does the trick around here -- I think it needs to be 4" thick to be 19 R equivalent. It looks kind of neat from the inside when done and painted.
 
#11 ·
Look into cordwood homes. If you have access to lumber, you can build very inexpensively. My husband and I love the look (not all of them, but some). The thermal mass makes cordwood homes very energy efficient, too. Here is one we like: [ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5W4zzIFvto[/ame] . Our plan is to build into the hill. The back of our house will be high bermed concrete (north side). The east side will be an attached two car garage. Front will face south will lots of windows and a nice front porch with overhang to keep it cool in heat of summer. West side will be partially exposed and partially bermed.

LuLu