And we are back! The last few weeks we have been waiting for the Dome to dry. The plaster dried fairly quickly, also the floor inside. But the moisture levels in the straw bales has been difficult to understand. Even after weeks of drying the plaster the moisture level in the middle of the straw bales increased from 85%RH to 90%RH. The sensors in the straw bales just below the outside clay plaster has been increasing with higher outside temperatures and lower with at low temperatures - the opposite of what I would expect. The average moisture level in these areas are about 95%RH... of course the weather has not been very kind, here one of the rainy and windy days, but the clay still seems to be fairly dry.
After the floor dried (took about 10 days) we put the windows in. Then I taped them from the outside. And we started to heat the inside:
Domas from Lithuania stopped by with his friends on the way to Italy - we had a great evening!
The border between the floor and the walls that had been covered with cardboard had to be fixed. The gap has been filled in by Catalina today. She arrived from Hungary yesterday. Now this part is also air tight:
And the big news: we decided to take the roof down and put the EPDM on. Here is the roof cover being taken off:
On some spots some dew in the morning had been dripping down from the tent, so a hairdryer was used to dry the clay surface:
The EPDM from
Athos Syntec arrived in one roll and needed to be refolded on the nearby field:
Then we started to take apart the wooden construction - this was not too difficult:
Even the last element was standing nearly on its own - really a good design:
First picture without the roof!
We were putting geotextile around the wooden parts to protect against any sharp elements:
The concept I had to put the EPDM on worked much better than we thought - after lifting the EPDM up it took just a short half hour to cover the whole structure!
The hole in the middle is 90cm diameter - just a bit smaller than the frame to have a good fit:
The membrane was then lowered onto the structure, and gravity did the rest of the job:
The membrane is definitely big enough, big chunks will have to be cut out:
The membrane covers everything - tomorrow we will adjust the EPDM, fix it and cut off the parts in front of the windows:
In the evening Tom Rijven arrived from Poland! Another nice evening:
Tomorrow we hope to get a better fit for the membrane and then we will start with the green roof! Will be back with an update!