b-home (marked roughly in red) sits in the middle of the Talking Walls Case Study Area (small detail above)
b-home began in 2006 when the 1st 13.5 acres was acquired (which included a peak of Vedder Mountain!). In 2008, the second matching 13.5 was added. This project was an experiment in collaborative intuitive building processes where our aim was to “put our waste to work!”. Along the way all the amazing ancient stone work started “talking” THESE ARE THE ‘WALLS’ WE ARE LOOKING FOR! …..And the story is still unfolding! It’s a fine time to turn on a new paradigm!
Think Henry Ford's Greenfield Village meets Tinguely and Niki de Saint Phalle's Cyclop
-with A dose of 'drop city' thrown in for good utopian re-use themed measures.. All this co-existing in the midst of a Coral Castle- Chaco Canyon- Fort Ancient East- Fever Grand Dream “We’re Still in the Garden of Eden but……….” Thomas Cole
Following in Martin Pawley's reuse habitat teachings (Book:Building for Tomorrow-Putting Our Waste to Work)- and using what Claude Levi Strauss referred to as techniques of the ‘Bricoler’ -- Celebrating one of the themes Buckminister Fuller delved into in his 1938 book 9 Chains to the Moon -- Scrap - Coup D’ Etat of the Random Element:
“Hail! Humble scavengers and mongers- circle closers of the industrial cycle of continuity- Knights of the random element”
The Old Historical Maps can be view at the bottom along with earlier b-home maps
The Real Estate listing for b-home can be viewed here and a video of the project and land can be viewed here
recent b-home news- CNBC, ArtNet , WYNC’s Gothamist, the New York Post and Colossal.
Old blog from the earlier days of b-home can be perused here
Map of b-home- and the builders as of 2020—- More Maps at the bottom
From Claude Levi Strauss’s Savage Mind 1962
A nice connection between games and DIY building
“There still exists among ourselves an activity which on the technical plane gives us quite a good
understanding of what a science we prefer to call “prior”; rather than “primitive”;, could have been on the
plane of speculation. This is what is commonly called “bricolage”; in French. In its old sense the verb
“bricoler”; applied to ball games and billiards, to hunting, shooting and riding. It was however always
used with reference to some extraneous movement: a ball rebounding, a dog straying or a horse
swerving from its direct course to avoid an obstacle. And in our own time the “bricoleur” is still
someone who works with his hands and uses devious means compared to those of a craftsman.”
“Architecture is inhabited sculpture”
- Constantin Brancusi
“There is much to learn from architecture before it became an “experts”
art. Untutored builders…demonstrate an admirable talent for fitting
their buildings into their natural surroundings. Instead of trying to
“conquer” nature.”
-Bernard Rudofsky
Giving a tour of b-home-2021 photo by Maeve McOool
not sure what year this 2009?
A map I drew for Fritz Welch and Rachel Lowther back in 2011
View from Vedder Mountain looking east from the top of the land,
1867 Beer’s atlas map showing the Public Highway that cuts through a pass in Vedder Hill and connects with Vedder Mountain Road- This map is from before there were any buildings down the Public Road.-also - Note the reference to “Quarry Lands” opposed to other small areas labeled “Stone Quarry”
The 1895 topo Map of the Public Road that led through to Vedder Mountain Road
1938 topo of 487 cauterskill road- this map includes the Old Public Road with the dashed line showing the full highway
map of the some of the Ancient Stone Work noted at b-home and a copy of Talking Walls on top of the map. photo credit: Patrick Kiley
A detail from Survey Map showing some of the ‘old’ stone walls and the Old Public Highway- -
Check the LIDAR Site- and select Hillshade mode. There is a tool included on this site that allows you to measure the distance of your walls! Give it a try! https://orthos.dhses.ny.gov/ or go Here
b-home Hillshade Image from the Lidar site above
Lisa Ludwig’s 3-D model of b-home from circa 2015 -See her whole booklet of mini replicas of the structures at b-home circa 2012 HERE
Jonas Lindberg’s Barbed Wire Teddy Bear- Hanging In there!
Carrie Dashow’s Archive of Lost Thought
Matt Moorman’s V- Haus
Rachel Lowther’s Orange Wolf infront of Evan Pritchard’s Library
rocket tub and mini sauna- built with Stephen Hren and Jared Handelsman
Maximilian and Miles Goldfarb’s LP Tower
Lisa Marie Ludwig’s Cicada Bunker
The Tea House- Golf T’s, Mister T, Teen Titans HQ, Aldous Huxley’s “Oh Ford- Model T Building, Museum for Old Beloved T-shirts, Tea Ceremonies and more
T-House
The Owl Shed
Jo Q Nelson’s Fun Palace
Cory and Eli’s shack- made from the Cribs to Cribbage skeleton
Lower case ‘a’ frame
Stairway to Heaven/ Hairway to Steven House
Steve Kubicek’s chainsaw sculpture leaning into The Hairway To Heaven House
Giant Shoe- Or a Skeleton of A giant Shoe
Rob Roy inspired cord wood sauna
The 1st Library that had a large part of a tree graze it.
Inside 1st library with Fritz Welch sculptural speaker element
Jesse Bercowetz’s Day and a Half- House- Parts mostly from a demo’d dollar store ware house
West side of Jesse’s. Note the rocker switch leaning against. It helped ‘Flip the Switch On’ for WGXC back at the Barn Raising event with Prometheus and crew.
arbor glyphs on building by Dagen Julty
All tiny house parks must have a pallet strcuture!
pallet hut north view
The so-called “Crotch(of tree) rocket- built with Christopher Robbins-2008?
Photo: christopher robbins
Paul Howe’s 1st sculpture- brought to b-home 2008-ish. It is a Heavy piece!
Slab Shed
All Empires Must Fall
Alex Perry’s Log Structure
Alex Perry’s log structure with sun!
Adam Katzman’s ‘tree hugger’ (unofficial name) is literally ‘hanging in there!’
very 1st structure at b-home- the out house!
A collection of pecked and curious stones
A group of embedded objects - placed 15 or so years ago by Stephen Hren- There was originally three bottles- but one broke.
TALES FROM THE SUSTAINABLE UNDERGROUND - New Society Publishers- 2011
By Stephen Hren
ART Chapter Excerpt:
For nearly two decades now I’ve known the artist Matt Bua. I was first introduced to Matt through the sometimes rock star and general shape-shifting poet Ryan Adams. Fresh out of high school in the early 90’s, Ryan and I lived together in a crumbling five bedroom house on the west-side of Raleigh, North Carolina, where we would stay up all night drinking forties of cheap malt liquor and collaborating on puerile “novels” that contained no verbs, banged out on cheap old typewriters, our creativity occasionally supplemented with the over consumption of cough syrup; the whole house no bigger than a modern home’s living room. Late one night, on an impromptu caffeine-fueled jaunt, we headed down the dark highway towards eastern North Carolina and ended up in Matt’s college town of Greenville (home of East Carolina University) in the wee hours of the night. As Ryan had previously met Matt through the pre-internet underground web of alternative music, art, and literature that survived mainly through late 20th century zines like Matt’s xeroxed rag (with Eric Hinson), Larks Tongue In Fluke Juice , We decided to rouse Matt from his bed. There was no light on at Matt’s place, but figuring they’d traveled so far, Ryan threw rocks at Matt’s window until they finally saw his head poke through under the sash. Regardless of the hour, he was happy to see his old friend Ryan, and invited us in. It didn’t take long to realize that, coincidentally, I had recently submitted a poem to Matt’s zine, and our friendship took off from there. From then on, I would trek down to ECU whenever Matt had an art happening, until Matt wrapped up his art studies in Greenville and made the move to New York City to make his way as an artist.
Matt’s art has, since that first night, been expanding my understanding of what art is and what it is for. I had a fairly traditional education when it came to art, usually taking the word as just a shorter way of saying “painting.” So once every year or so, I’d have my mind blown when I’d make it up to the big apple to see an opening and see what Matt (often working with his collaborators Jesse Bercowetz,) was up to. A re-creation of the Mir space station built using found objects (and inhabited for days at a time by the artists-led by Ward Shelley); drawings made by attaching a pencil to a U-haul moving truck and driving it back and forth (with Jesse and Ward); a long-term commitment to beef-up lifting weights and then performing a coordinated exercise routine in freaked-out jumpsuits for crowds of onlookers (With Jesse and Aron Namenwirth). Those are just a few of the many projects that Matt, Jesse and the others had going on. Other contemporary work in their circle of friends included an artist living inside the walls of the art gallery for a month, or focusing on “transmission art” such as radio wave manipulation and attempts at free energy through Tesla coils. It seems like wherever humans have built or created something, artists are right behind them manipulating, rearranging, and interpreting.
After a dozen years in the city, Matt broadened his focus. Purchasing property in the Catskills near Hudson, NY, he starting setting up a place for art to interact with its surrounding ecology through small buildings, a project he calls “b-home”; Buildings and the environment, these are things that were right up our alley, and I was happy to pitch in some time and help get him started. And I didn’t have to spend too much time up there before I started getting my mind blown again, not just from the “loose” structures Matt was throwing up, but also by the buildings his collaborators were putting up, and then by the multifarious dimensions of other “eco-art’ being creating all over the world.
On my latest trip up north I detrained in nearby Hudson, N.Y. at 2 am. Outside the station, I saw Matt’s ancient but mostly intact Ford F1-150, easily capable of squeezing at least four people in the front seat, come rolling down the hill through the dark fog. I jumped inside and rambled through the winding hills to b-home.
Awaking the next morning in a structure called the Owl’s Den to brilliant September sunshine, the sugar maples just starting to show a hint of vermillion and the forest floor covered with protruding mushrooms, some of which I knew would make their way into the night’s supper. b-home is located on the western side of Vedder Mountain, and is split in two by a power-line cut. From the road, it’s entered from a small ridge and slopes quickly down to a modest brook, around which most of the current activity focuses. Coming down the slope, it doesn’t take long to realize that the normal world of rectangular buildings and organized grassy lawns has long since been abandoned for a different paradigm. Immediately at the bottom of the hill, a large metal storage container leans northward, its contents spilling outward down the hill towards a plexiglas-roofed structure that looks like it barely survived a Japanese earthquake.
This marks the beginning of a long alley lined with the discards of American civilization, from piles of rough-cut lumber, storefront totem poles, and rolls of plastic tubing to homeless art projects like a giant barbed-wire teddy bear and a functioning corn liquor still. Beyond these piles, what appear at first glance to be crudely built hobbit dwellings turn out on closer inspection to be intricate structures of indeterminate use, their organic geometry comprising an unexpected wholeness. In many of these small buildings, natural elements like multitudes of branches wrapped together, earth plasters, and living trees are integrated with manufactured items such as randomly-cut sheets of metal and plastic, children’s action figures, and old windows. The immediate impression is of the work of a flock of giant bower-birds that raided the remains of Fresh Kills landfill and then headed north into the mountains to build their empire.
This is a retreat from the confines of everyday civilization, but not the kind where you get to lounge around pool-side in the sun. With the goal of changing how the world conceives of its relationship with the natural world through the medium of the built environment, the work at b-home is never-ending. Since there isn’t actually any flock of giant bower-birds, the hard work gets done by Matt and the migrating rotation of artists and builders that come through.
The majority of my work this time centered around building a human-scale solar oven to keep Matt warm in the brutal winter months. Using six posts that Matt had sunk deep into the ground on a south-facing hill and secured using a packed-rubble footing, we created a triangular building of perhaps 100 square feet, the broad side opening towards the winter sun. A solar oven works by creating a small, black, well-insulated space that can be dramatically heated up using reflectors to capture the energy of the sun. The goal of our building was not to cook the contents, of course, but rather bring the wintertime temperature up from sub zero to a living temperature of around 60 or 70F.
As backup heat storage and as a means of supplemental heat, we worked hard building a high-thermal mass rocket stove. A rocket stove is a unique kind of masonry stove. The basic principle of both is to create an extremely hot fire capable of combusting almost all of the smoke, making for a very efficient and clean burn. Instead of this heat immediately warming its surroundings, the heat is stored in a substantial amount of masonry such as stone or brick. The heat then percolates out into the surrounding room over a period of 12 to 24 hours. What is unique about a rocket stove is the design of the burn chamber. Instead of a traditional fire box, wood is burned vertically from the bottom. The heat and smoke are then captured momentarily in an insulated truncated chimney covered by a metal barrel, where the temperature rises high enough (upwards of 1,200F) to complete the final combustion of smoke and other particulates. The heat from this chamber then winds through masonry before exiting the building. In our human solar oven design, we planned on the rocket stove heating a bed made out of cob, to keep its inhabitants warm through the long, cold northern nights. The usual daily routine at b-home involves many of the ecologically- minded activities we’re used to at our own home: putting a dinner dish in the solar oven, hunting in the woods for goodies like Cinnabar Chantarelles and Chicken-Fat Suillus, emptying out the humanure buckets into the compost, and checking the meter on the PV system. The art itself is not just ecologically-minded, but the process of its creation is as well.
It’s all part of a reinvigorated movement to interpret our myriad ecological dilemmas through the kaleidoscopic lens of art. It is the duty of the artist to act as both mirror to society and as thought- provoking visionary of what might be. With recognition of our inability to maintain our civilization in its current guise, it’s not surprising that many artists today are incorporating ideas of ecology and sustainability into their work. Always on the margin and underpaid for work whose value might not be recognized for years or decades (if ever), artists like Matt who are embracing ecological issues, or Eco-Artists, are nevertheless remarkable in the contemporary art world for the almost universal unmarketability of their creations.
About the Author
Stephen Hren is a restoration carpenter, master cob builder and teacher who specializes in sustainable design and solar heating technologies. He is the co-author of The Carbon-Free Home and A Solar Buyer’s Guide for the Home and Office.
‘Big Media’ from the 2010 WGXC Barn Raising event with container and Harry Mathew’s ‘pump-organ grinder’ addition
View from the top of the property