Monolithic Dome Suffers Slight Scorching In Oklahoma Wildfire That Destroys Five HomesFebruary 9, 2006 by Freda Parker
For 16 months, the construction of Jerri and Darrell Strube's new Monolithic Dome home, 50 feet in diameter and 23 feet high, in Marlow, Oklahoma went relatively smoothly. Once Andy Barnes, owner of Alpha Omega Builders in Kingston, Oklahoma, completed the dome shell, Jerri and Darrell began doing the finishing. And all continued going rather well -- until January 12. On that unseasonably warm, very windy afternoon, a wildfire broke out in Stephens County, enveloping Marlow. Despite the efforts of more than a dozen fire departments and four air tankers, rapidly spreading flames charred 3000 acres just in Stephens County and destroyed five homes. Nila Kappely, Jerri's sister, owned one of those homes -- a typical country farmhouse sitting just across the road from the Strube's Monolithic Dome. But Darrell and Jerri were far more fortunate. "We lost five homes out there," Jerri said. "But ours wasn't (lost). I mean the fire came up right to the edge, singed a little bit of the Airform, down low, but as we were told, the Airform is not flammable.* As soon as the grass burned away from it, the Airform was fine. It scorched a little, but it didn't burn." Two weeks after the fire, Monolithic called the Strubes to see how they were doing. Jerri said, "It's going pretty good. My husband and I have been constructing this home in such a way so as not to have a house payment when it was done. Since my sister's house burned down, she and her husband are having to move into our house -- before we can -- and so we're having to share a bathroom. And we're trying to get the kitchen in so they can use that. We're still in the construction mode." As for the damaged Airform, Jerri said, "I talked to Larry (Byrne) at your office about it. He said to just wash it off really, really good -- scrub the black off -- then get some urethane paint and paint the outside of it. The scorching is just a small area." While Jerri and Darrell continue working on their Monolithic Dome home, Nila and Wyatt Kappely plan to build one of their own. Jerri said, "Nila picked out a floorplan that she likes out of your book (Dome Living) that has all the plans in it. She gave it to Larry and he is now sketching out her ideas because she wanted some changes -- a pantry and a door added." Other Marlow residents who lost their homes have also expressed an interest in Monolithic Domes. "We've actually given away another one of your books with your website on it to one neighbor," Jerri said. "We've given a couple of tours of our dome, and we've probably had about five or six people that stopped in and wanted to look at it and get more information." *David B. South, Monolithic's president, says that "not flammable" is not a correct characterization of an Airform. But the terms "fire-retardant" and "self-extinguishing" are appropriate. Related Links:
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