- Beyond Sustainability - The Case for Regenerative Design
- Understanding Place - Climate, Site, and Solar Geometry
- The Six Integrated Systems - An Overview
- Building with the Earth—Natural Materials
- Passive Solar Design - Heating and Cooling Without Machines
- Off-Grid Energy Systems - Power from the Sun
- Water - Catching, Storing, and Cycling
- Liquid Waste Treatment - Botanical Systems
- Food Systems—Buildings That Feed
- Community Design - Scaling Up
- The Integrated Design Process
- Appendix A: Glossary of Key Terms
- Appendix B: The Pangea Textbook Series
- Appendix C: Key Design Principles at a Glance
- The Regenerative Community Vision
- Site Assessment and Land Reading
- Land Use Law and Legal Frameworks
- Master Planning for Regenerative Communities
- Infrastructure Systems Integration
- Housing Typologies and Density Design
- Community Governance Structures
- Economic Models for Community Development
- Phased Development Strategy
- Community Resilience and Long-Term Stewardship
- Appendix A: Legal Entity Comparison Chart
- Appendix B: Community Design Checklist
- Appendix C: Glossary of Community Development Terms
Cob is a mixture of clay, sand, and straw that is combined with water into a plastic mass and applied directly by hand in layers to build monolithic walls. Unlike adobe (which is formed into discrete bricks), cob is worked as a continuous plastic material — closer to pottery or sculpture than to bricklaying. This gives cob walls an organic, sculptural quality that is difficult to achieve with any other building material, and it allows curved walls, built-in furniture, and complex forms that would be expensive or impossible in conventional construction.
Cob walls are extremely strong in compression and have good tensile strength due to the fiber reinforcement of the straw. They are self-supporting for wall heights up to two stories without additional reinforcement. Like adobe, cob has excellent thermal mass properties and good moisture management characteristics in appropriate climates. Cob is generally best suited to mild, temperate, and semi-arid climates where moisture is manageable; in wet climates, exterior protection becomes more critical.
Building with cob is labor-intensive but requires no specialized equipment and minimal material cost. The clay soil and straw needed are typically available locally or within a short distance of almost any building site. Cob buildings can be built by unskilled volunteers with good instruction, making them well-suited to community building projects and owner-builder situations.
