|
Tom
Chudleigh |
|
Suspended Spherical Tree Houses |
|
The
"Spherical Tree House" concept borrows heavily from sailboat construction and rigging practice.
It’s a marriage of tree house and sailboat technology.
Wooden spheres are built much like a cedar strip canoe or
kayak. Suspension
points are similar to the chain plate attachments on a
sailboat. Stairways hang
from a tree much like a sailboats shrouds hang from the mast.
Physical
Arrangement
A
sphere is accessed by a spiral stairway and short suspension bridge.
The two lower back suspension points of the sphere are tied
horizontally to the two back trees, to keep the suspension bridge from
sagging when it is walked on. The door faces the
“door tree” and the suspension bridge connects the two.
A helical stairway spirals up or down from the suspension bridge
to the ground or next level. Spherical architecture has many new features. Conventional buildings separate walls, ceiling and floor with hard lines and often color and material changes. In a sphere the walls and ceiling merge into one. The function changes but the form remains the same. It is a unified structure with one continuous wall. I call it uniwall construction. There are only 2 sides to a sphere: inside and outside.
Externally
the spherical shape is well adapted to life in the forest.
It is bio- mimicry. A hazard of life in the forest is trees and branches falling in a
strong wind or ice storm. A sphere distributes any impact stress throughout the skin
and resists puncture or cracking. Like
a ping pong ball or a nut, it’s light with a tough skin.
The sphere is also suspended from ropes which stretch and absorb
some of the force.
The
suspension concept is also bio-mimicry. The idea is to have the sphere and web function naturally in
its environment. If
something really big, like a tree,, falls through the web then some
strands break and let it pass through.
The sphere remains suspended by the remaining strands.
A major disaster like that is not likely, but possible. The spheres are well adapted to life in a large mature
forest.
Everything
including spiral stairways and suspension bridges is hung from ropes.
Trees are protected where ropes pass around them and the spiral
stairways hug the trees.
The
forest canopy is a magical environment.
Break the contact with the ground and the energy shifts.
Its hard not to think of elves and fairies or to not feel the
presence of the forest. That
presence seems to dwell in the canopy where it can watch the meanderings
below. A sphere is easily moved around within the forest by ropes and tackles. I have slung them from tree to tree during placement or removal. They can also be helicoptered in to remote sites. Finished weight is about 500 kg (1100 lb).
Climbing
the trees is the most difficult yet exhilarating work.
Typically it takes a crew of 3 men a day to get a sphere rigged
in the trees. Then it takes
several more days to set up the stairway and suspension bridges.
The whole set-up comes down in a day and vanishes without a
trace.
The
motion in a sphere is abrupt when another body inside shifts his weight, because
the mass of the sphere is low. When
you are settled in and the wind blows it results in a slow gentle
rocking motion. The rope
tethers are almost vertical which lets the treetops move considerably
while hardly moving the sphere at all.
The sphere movement is a muted average of the movement of the 3
treetops.
The
prototype sphere, Eve, is a 9’ (2.8m) diameter yellow cedar
sphere. Her big sister Eryn is
10 ½’ (3.2m) in diameter and made of Sitka spruce.
Each is made of 2 perpendicular laminations of thin wooden strips
glued together. The wooden
skin is then sanded and covered with 2 layers of woven fiberglass (GRP) roving
set in epoxy. The result is
a clear fiberglass skin that looks like a heavy coat of varnish.
The grain and texture of the wood shines through.
The insides are wired for power, sound and telephone.
Mine also has a notebook computer and good speakers.
It’s a great place to watch DVD’s.
True surround sound.
The
spheres are insulated and vinyl upholstery fabric is stapled to the
frames (lines of longitude). Each
fabric joint is then covered with a decorative wood strip.
The wood strips come together at the top and give a nice
cathedral ceiling effect. The
interior joinery is yacht style with much brass trim, varnished wood and
cane doors. Future spheres
will have fiberglass shells, artistically painted.
The interiors will be similar to Eryn.
Eryn
has closets on either side of the
door. These function as
partial bulkheads to reinforce the door opening as well as adding
cupboard space.
There is a double bed on the right centered under the 40" window. A settee with table is placed in front of the 42" window on
the left. The back wall
opposite the door provides a galley area with counter, cupboards and a
sink. A microwave and refrigerator are also installed. Above
the galley area there is a loft bed with full sitting headroom at the
center. Circular shelf segments connect the loft bed to the
cupboards on either side of the door.
Eryn
at 10 ½’ diameter has 1.8 times the volume of Eve.
She also has 3
more windows. Small ones
over the galley counter and in the door, with a large skylight in the
ceiling facing the door tree. Every
window is dished to the same radius as the sphere shell.
The spheres are easily heated with a small electric heater.
Future
improvements include a washroom/shower/sauna sphere complete with its
own effluent treatment system. It
will produce only clean water and compost with luck.
Something that could serve a whole colony of spheres on a remote
setting. At present I am making replicas of the 10 1/2 ‘ sphere, Eryn. My goal is to produce 10 - 15 more spheres and hang them all in a large area of old growth forest. This will be used as a spiritual retreat for me and whoever else is interested. I am also selling completed spheres, shells and component kits for the “do it your selfers” who want to be able to finish out their own sphere. [Top] |
|
Click on the links to view Free Spirit Spheres featured on: British Columbia: 150th Anniversary TV Commercial CBC News "Spirit Spheres" Discovery Channel's Daily Planet. "Living like the Ewoks" |