Earth Building Association of New Zealand Inc
P.O Box 1452 Whangarei

 
EBANZ
"Promoting the Art and Science of Earth Building"

 

 

 

Cob

Cob is an old technique that offers the potential to create very sculptural wall shapes. Many of the old cob cottages in the South Island have survived from the last century.

For cob construction you mix straw and often small gravel into a sandy soil. You form the mixture into lumps or cobs, which you then throw on to the wall and stamp or work into the previous layer. The rough surface is later trimmed up, and usually rendered to give a smooth surface. The result is often a softly undulating surface, which can follow whatever shape you choose to build into the wall. Cob builds extra thick or curved walls easily, and it is common for them to taper inwards towards the top.

This technique is also very shrinkage sensitive and a mixture has to be found that minimises shrinkage. Because of the comparative lack of modern experience in New Zealand with cob, it is included in the Earth Building Standards only as an informative section, so careful analysis of materials and design is required.