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“The only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn, like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars and in the middle you see the blue centerlight pop and everybody goes "Awww!” -Jack Kerouac
Local Inventor bends bamboo for Revolution aka "The Chi'bagoda Project"

Local Inventor bends bamboo for Revolution

[for more info/links on this project please visit: 

http://chi-bagoda.gaia.com/

We are hoping to finally prototype at full scale on Jamaica

later this year.]

 

November 30, 2005 | Planet Jackson Hole Weekly

By Lauren Whaley  [please visit her site: http://thesnaz.com/ ]


Joshua Doolittle, artist-cum-inventor, can barely

speak fast enough to spit out his bazillion ideas. His

sage-colored eyes brighten as he spins them off -

green building design, climbing areas, emergency

shelters, technical clothes, and his newest idea:

"Chi'Bagoda" bamboo architecture.


Combining technical training with a strong environmental

ethic, the Rhode Island School of Design

alumnus and Colorado native says bamboo presents

a viable solution to preserving natural resources. He

calls bamboo the "ultimate renaissance material"

that can save the environment and help the needy,

promoting cheap, sustainable living. Doolittle's plan

involves creating structures that "salvage our global

environment," he said.


Bamboo tends to crack when harvested, which is

actually a good thing. Breaking the bamboo poles

down into strips creates a stable structural element.

Doolittle says these strips can then be banded or laminated

to create the structural elements of whatever

you are wishing to build: a five-story urban building

in Sao Paulo, Brazil, or a 100-foot diameter, solar powered

greenhouse dome to provide a consistent climate

for drought-stricken Africans.


The circular "Chi'Bagoda" domes at the center of

his plan begin with composite bamboo ribs attached

to a central hub. The mushroom form is constructed

of composite bamboo strip bundles and structural

supports. The frame is then sheathed with a layer of

woven bamboo mats, followed by a concrete or adobe

stucco skin. Passive solar systems can then supplement

standard plumbing and electrical systems.

Although he dreams of spreading the idea worldwide,

Doolittle first hopes to build a prototype

through Bamboo Technologies' facility in Vietnam.


The bamboo shoot


According to http://www.bamboocentral.net/ , bamboo is the

fastest growing plant on Earth. It produces greater

biomass and 30 percent more oxygen than a hardwood

forest on the same area, while improving

watersheds, preventing erosion, restoring soil, providing

sweet edible shoots and removing toxins

from contaminated soil.


Bamboo timber can be harvested every

year after seven years, compared to 30 to

50 years for trees. It can also be selectively

harvested annually and regenerates without

replanting.


With a tensile strength comparable to

steel and a weight-to-strength ratio surpassing

that of graphite, bamboo is the

strongest woody plant on Earth. Its 1,500

species thrive in diverse terrain from sea

level to 12,000 feet on every continent but

the poles.


"The bamboo grove is a giant rebar factory,"

Doolittle said, explaining how

durable yet cheap the natural material is.

Doolittle said Vietnam has about

200,000 square miles of bamboo forests.

Bamboo feeds people, houses them, and

provides raw materials for utensils,

weapons, baskets, ropes, hats and many

other practical and spiritual uses.


"It's clear that this idea has been successfully

implemented in various forms,"

he said. "The Mesopotamians built

Quonset huts like tea houses, using a

banded swamp reed technique to form

giant structural hoops. Many Iraqi buildings [like

this] have been standing for 3,000 to 5,000 years.
The South Iraqis of today still build using this
system."


The bamboo frame system remains pervasive

throughout Asia and Polynesia. Despite how widespread

they are, however, bamboo dwellings are

looked down upon in many societies.


"The trend with bamboo homeowners throughout

the world is to rebuild with lumber or cinder

blocks once they can afford to do so," Doolittle

explained. "They do this, because ... they want to

rise above the negative stigma of living in an abode

built with the ‘poor man's building material."


This western trend, Doolittle said, is non-sustainable

and will ultimately lead to further destruction.

With his Chi'Bagoda project, then, Doolittle is

doing more than simply building. He's proposing a

paradigm shift into what he calls "future primitive,"

a movement that allows modern people to simplify

their lives and reconnect to their landscape.


Start of a dream

As a teenager, Doolittle worked on construction

crews in Colorado with climbers who waxed eloquent

on environmental decimation. While in

Colorado, he dreamed Eldorado Canyon was inhabited

by a colony of circular dome huts. Chi'Bagoda is

a manifestation of that dream.


I am also into Buddhism, Taoism and Eastern

philosophy," Doolittle said. "The pagoda is a

Buddhist temple that generally has a stacked arch."

In addition, Doolittle has been studying a 3,000-

year-old form of Tai Chi for the past eight years.

"So ‘Chi'Bagoda' is a fusion of ‘Chi' and ‘pagoda,'

but Chi'Bagoda has a better ring to it than

Chi'Pagoda."


Bamboo itself represents

the dichotomy of

wealth and nothingness.

It is also quick growing,

high, straight and very

strong, qualities that

present not only a high quality

building material,

but also something spiritual

in traditional Chinese

culture, something that

symbolizes positive

human qualities.


Seeking advice, ideas

and funding, Doolittle

has tapped resources in

Burlington, Vt., Boulder,

Colo., Ventura, Calif., Portland, Ore.,

Maui, Hawaii, Providence, R.I., and

now Vietnam and Saigon.


With the help of many people -

his primary teammates are Zak

Rosser, whom he met at the Brew

Pub one night, and Mike Gestwick,

whom he met during an "afternoon

art adventure" around Moran, but

aid has come from RISD professors,

Vietnamese bamboo farmers, his Tai

Chi instructor Greg Brazelton, and

Teresa Griswold and Steve Crafts

who did some graphic design work

for the project - Doolittle has created

"patentable building material

that is an organic, sustainable

expression of steel rebar, but much

easier and lighter to work with since

you can use standard carpentry tools

and fasteners," he said.


The Chi'Bagoda design recently

won an honorable mention in the sustainable

development Pangaea

Institute Design Competition and was

included in "Emergent: New Directions

in Sustainable Art and Design," hosted

by Doolittle's alma mater.


"The competitions are really getting

this project moving," Doolittle said.


Gimme shelter

In addition to building homes and

offices, Doolittle hopes the Chi'Bagoda

design can be used for emergency shelters.

These lighter, fabric-skinned

domes could be mass produced.


They could be shipped to disaster

areas to be used as temporary but

long-term emergency housing, storage,

clinics, meal areas, etc.," he said.


"The bamboo Chi'Bagoda

would not only provide a

more affordable, sustainable

and culturally appropriate

response to the

housing crisis, but also a

structural system that

has proven to be highly

earthquake resistant."

He claims that bamboo

structures in

Columbia and Costa Rica

have survived 7.2 and

7.5 magnitude earthquakes

while surrounding

cinderblock dwellings

collapsed.


"The bottom line is

that with some tinkering,

we should be able to

build just about anything,

but the one optimal theme is to incorporate

arcs to gain the added structural

integrity that occurs when material

is put in tension," he said. "This is the

same premise behind dome tents."


Inventing a future

After researching, drawing and

talking to as many people as possible

for about eight months, Doolittle estimates

his full-scale prototype will cost

$8,000.


"We're pretty confident this is

going to work," he said. "This could

turn into developments all over the

world, for the Indonesian fisherman

to upscale Jacksonites and everything

in between."


Eventually, after building his prototype

in Asia, Doolittle hopes to gain

access to Vietnamese and Venezuelan

bamboo groves and turn Chi'Bagoda

into a business.


"The Chi'Bagoda vision is to also

operate a nonprofit division that

would be busy promoting and teaching

this idea in the economically

emerging nations of the world, many

of which already have abundant bamboo

sources," he said. "This is

extremely crucial if our planet is going

to survive, and us with it."


Moving a mile a minute, designing

and pontificating, telling anyone who

will listen, this local inventor continues

to spin. If you see someone scribbling

furiously in Pearl Street Bagels or

the library, it is likely Josh Doolittle

planning his next project or scheming

ways to come up with the money to

see his dreams turn into reality.


[Corrections:  Not a native of Colorado, was

born in Rochester, NY 6/8/72 and there's

never been a conversation on a construction

 site that I can recall ever qualifying as

"waxed eloquent".  I did, however, once work

for an extremely kind, wise and generous

stone mason for a few weeks in Boulder, CO,

Fall '01, that involved interesting

conversations about past lives.  It was holding

a bamboo fly rod that he owned that later

provided the 'trigger" for my bamboo housing

vision.]

Published Tuesday, April 15, 2008 5:24 PM by JDoo

Filed under:

Comments

# re: Local Inventor bends bamboo for Revolution aka "The Chi'bagoda Project" @ Wednesday, April 16, 2008 5:15 PM

Bamboo is great stuff. I like bamboo cutlery the best. It's hard for me to get all warm and fuzzy about a building material when America is facing a major glut of unwanted construction. Someday, I hope to see a focus on estheticly pleasing buildings made of bamboo. America is slowly waking to the reality it needs to abandon the suburbia model of lifestyle. We need a refreshed attitude toward small walkable communties like Jackson. Bamboo would be a perfect option for the reconstruction of America, because everything will have to be done with a large amount of environmental friendliness. The only reason why Bamboo won't be as big as it could, is that it isn't a product of America.

George Bush

# re: Local Inventor bends bamboo for Revolution aka "The Chi'bagoda Project" @ Thursday, April 17, 2008 2:57 PM

Actually....bamboo can be found through out the SE USA, which is where the term "bamboozled' originated.  It also grows in pockets out on Long Island, even Portland, ME.  These species are not "industrial grade" however, so not structurally viable to be used architecturally in "tube" form.

To be "bamboozled" originally referred to when an arriving colonialist from Europe arrives on the land he had bought "sight unseen" only to find it over run with bamboo groves.  This prevented him from using the land for farming purposes.  Early colonial settlers lacked the necessary dynamite or back-hoe to remove it.

Bamboo is often referred to as "part animal" by people that grow it, usually considered as an invasive pest, but my new system will change all that.  It will transform the more "weedy" species, like the kind that grow here in the USA, into a renaissance green building material, hopefully inspiring a viral sustainable architectural revolution.  We hope to empower people to affordably and sustainably build their own homes and communities.

My banded bamboo strip beam system represents an "organic steel" and doesn't not use any glues.  It is an entirely new architectural equation.  Various methods are being explored to provide the strapping process.  Our goal is to provide "open source" DIY guides on our site(s).

We are hopefully headed to Jamaica in May/June '08 to collaborate with a school building outreach operation:

http://irievibeenterprises.com/jesp.html

Please visit these pages for more info, hopefully the links will work.  I am still figuring out this blog format.

http://bambitat.com/

http://bamboocompetition.com/spages/1420-03.html

http://chi-bagoda.gaia.com/

The "Perma Yurt" structure being merely a logical beginning.  Prefab sky scrapers are merely a matter of time.  I've got it all figured out.

Your time and consideration is greatly appreciated!

JDoo

# re: Local Inventor bends bamboo for Revolution aka "The Chi'bagoda Project" @ Thursday, April 17, 2008 3:17 PM

It's safe to say that wood is more common, and will always be more widely used because of it. It's a worthwhile project, but I think you need to focus on using the product where it's grown.

George Bush

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