For ten years, Joe Frawley was a regular columnist for Dome Magazine, published by Hoflin Publishing, Inc. out of Wheat Ridge, Colorado.
His topics included detailed information about all things “dome”, including the fundamentals of construction, mechanics, financing and marketing. Infused throughout was his unique perspective on being a round house owner and all the joys and frustrations that it entailed.
Would you like to build your own dream dome, and are you relatively new at the building process? Perhaps the following will answer some of the questions of “what do I do next?”
Rumors by various proponents of dome design contend that a dome structure requires less lumber materials than a conventional square house covering the same number of square feet of living space.
The language of geodesics is sometimes difficult to understand by the layman, so by default, this article will attempt to explain some of the common terms in dome description…
This article will attempt to define some of the basic details among residential dome designs that are available, and also attempt to explain the more basic geometry that is used by many dome manufacturers today…
Why would you ever opt to consider such a radical design for a home? This question has been asked on many occasions since I first entered the area of spherical housing in 1975…
Although the dome appears to be radically different from the conventional roof, it is shingled using the same basic techniques as conventional construction…
A great to-do is going on here in the metropolitan area about mold that is occurring in public buildings, and that the mold is affecting people’s health…
Welcome to the frustration club. Here we really find out how bias, ignorance, and prejudice find their way into the everyday business of dome home financing.
I have talked about this before, but it seems that some dome manufacturers still think we are in the Seventies, when talking about domes meant attacking the persons who are building the domes, and attacking the dome design.
The following remarks are made with tongue in cheek, but they represent only a few of the hoops that some dome buyers have to jump through before they can realize the greatest living system since the sod house and the tepee…