a centuries old farmhouse for all seasons by jonathan tuckey design 7


The story of hemp is one of operatic highs and lows. Known for producing the finest and strongest fiber around, it was once considered essential. Hemp seeds sailed on the Mayflower—the stalks were used for making cloth (including the Mayflower’s very sails), rope, paper, and clothing, among other things. George Washington was a hemp farmer as were all the Jamestown settlers (growing hemp was legally required in the colony). Betsy Ross sewed her flag out of it. Then, a century and a half later, hemp all but disappeared.

In the 1930s, marijuana hysteria took hemp down with it and both became illegal to cultivate: though the two are Cannabis sativa, hemp contains only the merest hint of THC and is weed’s benign relative. The fact that it fell out of favor is hard to fathom. Hemp absorbs more CO2 per acre than any other commercial crop making it an ideal carbon sink. Unlike cotton, it requires little water and no pesticides to grow, And, on top of being highly insulating, it’s naturally fire-, pest-, and mold-resistant and serves as an excellent sound barrier.

Only recently legal to farm in the US, Canada, and the UK (France, where it’s been legal since the 1960s, is the European leader in cultivation), hemp and its many uses are again being explored—including as a sustainable, biodegradable building material. If you’re embarking on a home improvement project, you’d be wise to consider hemp insulation and the biocomposite known as hempcrete or hemplime. Here’s a look at these construction materials and how some of today’s eco pioneers are applying them.

a naturally insulating, eco friendly alternative to concrete, hempcrete is nons 17
Above: A naturally insulating, eco-friendly alternative to concrete, hempcrete is nonstructural and inserted in blocks within building frames. The ones here are from Hempitecture of Jerome, Idaho, a leading US hemp supplier and builder that we featured in Remodelista: The Low-Impact Home.

Hemp Insulation

at hemptitecture, bales of decorticated industrial hemp fiber await being conve 18
Above: At Hemptitecture, bales of decorticated industrial hemp fiber await being converted into hemp insulation known as HempWool. The finished product is composed of 90 percent hemp combined with a textile fiber binder.
Close
Close
Sign in
Close
Cart (0)

No products in the cart.



Currency


error: Content is protected !!