Can we build houses from living trees?
CrowdScience
BBC
4.8 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 19 February 2021
⏱️ 33 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
It’s the stuff of fairy tales – a beautiful cottage, with windows, chimney and floorboards … and supported by a living growing tree. CrowdScience listener Jack wants to know why living houses aren’t a common sight when they could contribute to leafier cities with cleaner air. The UK has an impressive collection of treehouses, but they remain in the realm of novelty, for good reasons. Architects are used to materials like concrete and steel changing over time, but a house built around a living tree needs another level of flexibility in its design. That doesn’t mean it’s impossible and CrowdScience hears about a project in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, where architect Ahadu Abaineh made a three-storey, supported by 4 living Eucalyptus trees as a natural foundation.
Host Marnie Chesterton meets some of the global treehouse building fraternity, including builder of over 200 structures, Takashi Kobayashi, who adapts his houses to the Japanese weather. In Oregon, USA, Michael Garnier has built an entire village of treehouses for his “Treesort”. He’s developed better ways of building , including the Tree Attachment Bolt, which holds the weight of the house while minimising damage to the tree.
Professor Mitchell Joachim from Terreform One explains the wild potential of living architecture, a movement which looks at organic ways of building. He’s currently building a prototype living house, by shaping willow saplings onto a scaffold that will become a home, built of live trees.
Photo Credit: Ahadu Abaineh
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Take some time for yourself with soothing classical music from the mindful mix, the Science of |
| 0:07.0 | Happiness Podcast. |
| 0:08.0 | For the last 20 years I've dedicated my career to exploring the science of living a happier more meaningful life and I want |
| 0:14.4 | to share that science with you. |
| 0:16.1 | And just one thing, deep calm with Michael Mosley. |
| 0:19.4 | I want to help you tap in to your hidden relaxation response system and open the door to that |
| 0:25.4 | calmer place within. Listen on BBC Sounds. |
| 0:30.3 | Hey there, welcome to the British countryside where I thought I'd start this |
| 0:36.9 | podcast by taking you to the site of my child Tree House. There's probably not much |
| 0:42.3 | left of it. |
| 0:44.0 | Treehouse also might be an overstatement because we never managed to build more than |
| 0:50.0 | sort of a rough den. |
| 0:52.0 | But my siblings and I had grand ambitions. Just no skills. |
| 0:59.0 | Otherwise we would have built something really impressive, like the Oregon tree tree house, right? Yeah. I mean, I'm using a living |
| 1:21.0 | a living tree, you know, to support the tree house. |
| 1:27.1 | Okay, and this is the, let me see, this is the view. |
| 1:31.6 | Wow, what a view. Wow, what a view. |
| 1:35.0 | You don't have to be that high up to get the different perspectives. |
| 1:40.0 | That's Michael, who will hear more from later in this episode of Crowd Science, giving me a tour via video link of his tree house home. |
| 1:50.0 | I'm Marnie Chesterton and I'm here to dish out an avalanche of Arborophilia, that's tree love, |
| 1:57.0 | as we hear from treehouse builders around the world. |
| 2:01.0 | But first to the listener, his question prompted this show. |
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