
Much gratitude to Michael Blaha of I Love Cob for hosting
these photo essays on cob cottages and natural building
these photo essays from English to Hebrew
![]() | Cascadia Cob | |
| beautiful healthy houses made of monolithic adobe along the West Coast of North America | ||
![]() | Cascadia Cob 2005 | |
| sequel to "Cascadia Cob," more earthen buildings from a road trip up the Left Coast | ||
![]() | Portland Pilgrimage 2005 | |
| mud structures built in the last year alone in the capital city of cob | ||
![]() | Old Bricks of Cob | |
| a still-inhabited 800-plus-year-old First Nations village built of adobe homes | ||
![]() | Earth Armada | |
| pictorial sampler of upscale rammed-car-tire earth houses in Taos, NM | ||
![]() | Goddess in the Details | |
| ecological architecture at a pan-spiritual ashram in rural New Mexico | ||
![]() | U. K. Cob | |
| earthen buildings in the United Kingdom, some in continuous use for over 500 years | ||
![]() | Little House on the Sahel | |
| communities of beautiful healthy houses made of earth in northern Ghana, West Africa | ||
![]() | Ethiopian Earth | |
| a six-part photo essay on natural building all across this East African country | ||
![]() | Castles Made of Clay | |
| the ultimate proof positive of the power of mud, the adobe skyscrapers of Yemen | ||
![]() | Mud Masters | |
| present-day mud-brick home builders in Yemen, from forms to floors to finishing | ||