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    What's this?
Texan builds artful, sustainable homes out of trash
Dan Phillips builds fantastical houses made almost entirely with materials which would otherwise have ended up in a garbage dump.

By

Angela Morris, AFP
Thu, Jan 13 2011 at 1:46 PM
 4

Related Topics:

Green Architecture, Green Design, Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Waste
green home built by Phoenix Commotion

GREEN HOME: Phillips’ Phoenix Commotion builds affordable, energy-efficient homes for single parents, low-income families and artists. (Photo: ZUMA Press)

Texas home builder Dan Phillips transforms trash into artful treasures, creating intricate floor mosaics with wood scraps, kitchen counters from ivory-colored bones and roofs out of license plates.
 
The fantastical houses which spring from his imagination are made almost entirely with materials which would otherwise have ended up in a garbage dump.
 
"People have been doing this for hundreds of thousands of years: using whatever is available to build shelter," Phillips said. "If you ponder what could be used, then building materials are everywhere."
 
Phillips founded Phoenix Commotion 12 years ago with the aim of creating a new model for sustainable, affordable housing.
 
The 13 homes he has built so far would fit better in an art museum than the residential streets of Huntsville, a conservative town of about 35,000 people best known for housing Texas's death row.
 
Living in them is a bit like living in a roadside attraction.
 
"Almost every day, somebody knocks on the door and says 'Is there any way that we could see?'" said Edie Wells, an artist who rents a room in the Bone House.
 
Her home features patio furniture and a stairway made of bones, floors covered in wine corks and beer bottle caps, and a skylight that used to be a Pyrex baking dish.
 
Wells said visitors are most impressed when they see a bathroom with its walls, floor and ceiling entirely paved in mirror shards.
 
Then there's the Storybook house that looks like it was transplanted from a 16th-century German village. Hansel and Gretel could have lived here.
 
One family built the Budweiser House in homage to their favorite American lager. The home doesn't look exactly like a beer can, but the exterior keeps the red, white and blue coloring and the symbolism — stars and Hops blossoms — you'll find on the Budweiser label.
 
Phoenix Commotion is a for-profit company that operates more like a nonprofit, aiming to solve several universal social problems.
 
For as little as $10,000 it builds affordable homes for single parents, low-income families and artists.
 
Plus, each house is highly energy efficient with ample insulation, an on-demand solar hot water heater and a catchment system that recycles rainwater to flush the toilet and wash clothes.
 
Phillips hires unskilled workers, teaches them marketable skills and helps place them in higher-paying jobs when they're ready.
 
"He's given me the opportunity to learn how to build, but also to tap into that creative side of myself," said apprentice Shannon Bryant. "And it's nice to find that, and let that out."
 
The company has diverted hundreds of tons of construction waste from landfills by upcycling the materials into habitable buildings.
 
So much construction material comes to Phoenix Commotion's door that storage is a constant dilemma.
 
Large, wholesale companies avoid costly disposal fees by sending Phillips 18-wheeler trucks loaded with lumber, tile and granite. Local residents also donate old fixtures like doors and bathtubs after remodeling their homes.
 
Phillips helped the city of Huntsville start a program called Trash Into Plowshares in 2003 after being overwhelmed with donations.
 
The materials are stored in a city warehouse and distributed for free to low-income residents and nonprofits to make building improvements.
 
"It does save us in costs," said Jenine Dean, assistant superintendent of Huntsville Solid Waste Services.
 
"But more importantly it keeps the stuff out of the landfill. Because we are just running out of room."
 
Huntsville's endeavor has been so successful that people across the United States and the world have talked with Phillips and city officials about creating reuse warehouses.
 
The city of Houston, the fourth largest in the United States opened a similar warehouse in October 2009.
 
Within just six months, Houston's warehouse diverted 200 tons, the weight of a Boeing 747.
 
Phillips continues trying to spread his recycled-house philosophy by speaking at events across the United States, and by using the Internet to reach out to like-minded individuals.
 
"It's cradle-to-cradle thinking. It's sustainable. And we are tidying up our own backyard at the same time," Phillips told AFP.
 
"I'm not going to be saving the world anytime soon. But there needs to be at least cameo visibility for this model in this century."
 
Copyright 2011  AFP Global Edition

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anonymous
angel Jan 31 2011 at 9:58 PM

Wow! THis is so cool! IF only I could get a customized one! Only $10,000! I so totally want one-think TAylor Swift, tons of sparkles, and a boat load of pink and gold:)

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anonymous
Denise Hennig, ... Jan 25 2011 at 10:30 AM

Our Islands don't have room for landfills. It costs a fortune to ship materials across the ocean so that we can build dwellings, then we toss the scrap into the landfill?
Doesn't make sense.

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anonymous
susala Jan 23 2011 at 10:32 PM

I would really like to know how we can get this started in our town. This is so wonderful to hear good news like this. Thank you so much.

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gaf36801redf
gaf36801redf Jan 18 2011 at 1:37 AM

I like these houses.Would like to have one of my own.

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