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Longevity

by David B. South, Jr.
reprinted from The Monolithic Dome Roundup Spring 1998

Why are we as Americans constructing buildings that only last a limited number of years? While riding my bike on the back roads of Texas, I came across a wood building.

At first, it appeared to me as a shack or an old barn. On closer inspection, I could tell it was once someone's home. Long vines of ivy were growing up the west side. On the east side was an overhang that looked, for lack of a better description, like a car port. The windows were long gone and I could not even tell what color the house was originally painted.

The whole structure appeared to slouching because the walls had shifted over the years. I peered inside and could see a staircase leading to a second floor. I could make out several rooms upstairs as well as larger rooms downstairs. I guessed its age was around 80 to 90 years.

There are a few buildings not far from it that are that old. Yet, as I studied it, I realized that it could easily be much younger. Perhaps someone built it in the 30's or maybe even the 40's.

I imagine at one time that it was a very nice house. It was brand new and a family had just moved in. It was clean, modern, and solid. The children would play in the yard and their parents would take care of the home. It was easy.
The house was new. How many years did they live there? Ten? Twenty? When did the house start to shift? When did they have to repaint or replace the aging wood? Where did they go for safety during bad weather?

Over the next twenty years, as the children grew and started to leave home, the house would need more and more care. One day, all the children would be gone and the mother and father would be alone. But the house will need more care than it ever did. Conversely, the couple would be older and less capable of repairing the home.

Eventually, the repairs and bills would be too much and the couple would need to move on. Possibly moving away from their town, friends, and maybe even their family. I ask the question again. Why are we building structures with a limited life span? We have the technology to make our homes last much longer. Let us build for centuries, rather than decades.

I am not arguing that everyone should live in a Monolithic Dome. Although I do feel that the Monolithic Dome is an ideal solution. I am arguing that we should start building permanent, low maintenance structures. Homes of the future, or any future building for that matter, should embody principles of safety, longevity, and low maintenance. The best way to conserve resources is make them last as long as possible.

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