There's quite a lot online about building with adobe or strawbales. However, we'll be building with the local material, stone.
Does anyone know of websites or books that discuss green building with stone?

Do you mean concrete block (breeze block)?paddy wrote:If it were me Nikki and i have thought about this in detail i would build an internal wall from block if you can, a 9" block as this will give you your thermal insulation especially if you use a good insulation in the cavity.
That raises another important point to note. If you're in an earthquake area then I guess that there will be local building / planning regulations that will need to be factored into your design. I'm no expert, but I think that for example in Italy, the use of lime instead of cement is difficult to get authorised in earthquake regions as cement is a requirement due to its greater strength.Nikki wrote: I'm not sure what type of stone it is. It's just there, from the mountain and from old houses that fell during their last earthquake (yep, most didn't have foundations)
Good for you i am glad to see you got one of the good ones.madasafish wrote:"You can never be completly green in the building of a house using stone as you will need foundations of concrete, i think not to have foundations would be foolish because of the expense involved. I know they didnt have foundations of concrete in the old days for a number of reasons and some of them are the reasons those old house arent here today. "
Hm I live in a stone built house with walls 1 metre to 1.5 metres deep and with a cavity as well - built around 1812 and with no obvious foundations.. It's still standing..and there was no concrete then:-)
Ours is still here, too. And it's built from granite on "no" foundations. I say none, because the builders dug trenches and put the largest granite boulders in first, then built the walls on top.paddy wrote:[There are a lot of buildings with no concrete foundations which have been around for hundreds and thousands of years...castles etc etc.....but most stone houses were put up maybe by the people who lived in them with stone they picked from their fields, and a lot of these houses simply weren't up to scratch.