<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item>
  <id>11608</id>
  <title>The New Hippie Kitchen</title>
  <published_at>Thu Apr 09 15:18:00 -0700 2009</published_at>
  <link>http://www.chow.com/stories/11608</link>
  <pubDate>Thu, 09 Apr 2009 22:18:00 GMT</pubDate>
  <short_description>Cooking the iconoclast way, in yurts, tepees, and more</short_description>
  <long_description>Cooking the iconoclast way, in yurts, tepees, and more.</long_description>
  <img>http://www.chow.com</img>
  <author>Lessley Anderson and Roxanne Webber</author>
  <category>
    <id>6</id>
    <name>Feature</name>
  </category>
  <pages>
    <page>
      <page_number>1</page_number>
      <content>
        <![CDATA[<div id="wanted">

      <h1>The New Hippie Kitchen</h1>
      <h3>Cooking the iconoclast way, in yurts, tepees, and more</h3>
      <p class="author">By Lessley Anderson and Roxanne Webber</p>

   <p class="intro">It used to be that only hippies grooved on stuff like rainwater filtration systems and solar panels. Finally the rest of the world is catching on. Here are 13 forward-thinking kitchens we feel best exemplify the hippie builder aesthetic: Their construction and function are in harmony with the Earth, they use few (or no!) nonrenewable resources, they&#8217;re built from reclaimed materials, and they don&#8217;t conform to mainstream ideas about kitchens. Plus, they look awesome. </p>

<div id="slideshow">

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline1_earthship.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>The Taos County, New Mexico–based Phoenix is an <a target="blank" href="http://www.earthship.net">Earthship</a>, a sustainable architectural style that incorporates used car tires and adobe. The circular shapes in the walls are recycled bottles that act as mini stained-glass windows. 
<br /> 
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by Kirsten Jacobsen</span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline2_idaho.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>This kitchen in northern Idaho is on the main floor of a bilevel yurt. The lower floor has round concrete walls and a slab foundation; the fabric yurt sits on top. The ladder at right goes up to the loft. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by <a href="http://www.livingintheround.net/" target="blank">Anne Byers via Living in the Round</a></span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline3_sandpoint.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>The owners of this yurt in Sandpoint, Idaho, have gradually built their homestead within their means, leaving them with little overhead or debt. The kitchen has homemade cabinetry, and the couple installed their own plumbing and electrical systems. The space is housed in a 30-foot fabric yurt, which the couple insulated with felt. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by <a href="http://www.livingintheround.net/" target="blank">Anne Byers via Living in the Round</a></span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline4_roundhouse.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>Tony and Faith Wrench&#8217;s <a target="blank" href="http://www.thatroundhouse.info">That Roundhouse</a> in Wales is a circular room made of cob (mud mixed with sand and straw) and recycled wood. Pipes through the wall take gray water into a reed bed. Water is solar-heated and stored in an oak brandy barrel. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by Tony Wrench</span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline5_stangiardome.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>Jamaica-based <a target="blank" href="http://www.paostanigar.com/">Patrick Stanigar</a>&#8217;s geodesic dome only has one living space, so Stanigar conceals kitchen items in wedge-shaped cabinets. More storage is in standard metal tool cabinets on wheels. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by David Cuthbert</span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline6_pangaia.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p><a target="blank" href="http://www.pangaia.cc/index.html">Pangaia</a> is an ecovillage in the jungle on the Big Island of Hawaii that uses rainwater and solar power. The kitchen is open, and connects directly to the vegetable garden. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by Kathy Vashro</span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline7_mekabunch.jpg" width="350" height="395" alt="" style="margin: 0 auto" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>A cob cottage built by <a target="blank" href="http://www.artisanbuilderscollective.org/about.html">Meka Bunch</a> in Wolf Creek, Oregon, has a passive cooling device that acts as the refrigerator: It&#8217;s a shelf (left of the sink) backed by a screen open to the outside. In the summer Bunch covers the screen with wet burlap and the device serves as an air conditioner. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by Chris McClellan</span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline8_centralmaine.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>This kitchen is in an otherwise fairly conventional central Maine farmhouse. It has an Amish wood-burning cookstove, poured concrete countertops, and a 400-pound retrofitted antique mop sink. The owners have a gas stove but more typically use the wood-burning stove&#8212;particularly in the winter&#8212;to cook food and heat the house. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/danielwescott/3298644682/in/set-72157614267565164/" target="blank">Daniel Wescott</a></span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline9_eryn.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p><a target="blank" href="http://www.freespiritspheres.com/eryn.htm">Eryn</a> is one of two spherical tree houses on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. The galley area has a microwave and a water dispenser with a small refrigerator underneath it. Tom Chudleigh, the owner and inventor of the spheres, says that they are designed to &#8220;fit harmoniously into a forest setting without altering it.&#8221; <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by <a href="http://www.freespiritspheres.com/" target="blank">Jasper Bosman</a></span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline10_mobilekitchen.jpg" width="350" height="395" alt="" style="margin: 0 auto" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>This mobile kitchen by Austin, Texas, green architecture firm the <a target="blank" href="http://www.cmpbs.org/">Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems</a> has its sink, stove, and counter space on casters so they can be rolled outside. A solar oven (the shiny object) is on the upper decks; the bucket is a water-collection cistern. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by Paul Bardadjy</span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline11_redearth.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>In the kitchen shed of <a target="blank" href="http://www.redearthfarms.org/">Red Earth Farms</a>, an off-the-grid <a target="blank" href="http://www.ic.org/">intentional community</a> in Missouri, a secondhand electric oven has been gutted and retrofitted with cob and a stovepipe. It&#8217;s heated with wood. Vegetarian perishables are kept cool in a bucket in a hole in the ground. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by Kim Scheidt</span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline12_flow.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>Water drips off the dishes hanging in the drying rack onto edible plants in the Flow kitchen, a prototype by Eugene, Oregon–based <a target="blank" href="http://www.studiogorm.com">Studio Gorm</a>. The table contains a worm compost bin. <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph ©2008 studio_Gorm</span></p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div class="slide clearfix">
        <img src="/assets/2009/04/inline13_farmhouse.jpg" width="590" height="395" alt="" />
        <div class="slide_caption">
        <p>This 615-square-foot tepee in southwest Colorado (no longer standing) uses a Hoosier baking cabinet (center) and pie safe (brown cabinet, right) to keep critters away from the food, since there&#8217;s no refrigerator&#8212;or electricity. Cooking is done on a six-burner wood cookstove and the central wood stove (pictured). <br />
<span class="photo-credit">Photograph by <a href="http://www.coloradoyurt.com/" target="blank">Martha Federson</a></span>
</p>
        </div>
      </div>

      <div id="ss_nav">
        <a class="arrow prev">previous</a>
        <span id="ss_nav_text"></span>
        <a class="arrow next">next</a>
      </div>

    </div> 

    
    <script type="text/javascript">

    var arrows = $$('#slideshow .arrow');
    var slides = $$('#slideshow .slide');
    var current_slide = 0;

    hideArrow('prev');
    slides[current_slide].addClassName('active');    
    var image_height = $$('.slide.active img')[0].getHeight();
    $('ss_nav').style.top = image_height + 25  + 'px'; // Position the nav 25 px below the slide image
    $('ss_nav_text').update([current_slide + 1] + ' of ' + [slides.length]);

    arrows.each(function(a) {
        a.observe('click', function() {
            if (a.hasClassName('prev')) { // arrow = prev
                current_slide--;
            } else { // arrow = next
                current_slide++;
            }

            slides.each(function(el){ el.removeClassName('active') }); // hide all slides

            slides[current_slide].addClassName('active'); // show current slide

            $('ss_nav_text').update([current_slide + 1] + ' of ' + [slides.length]); // update nav text

            // show or hide prev/next buttons if we're at the beginning or end of the list
            (current_slide == 0) ? hideArrow('prev') : showArrow('prev');
            (current_slide == slides.length - 1) ?    hideArrow('next') : showArrow('next');

        });

    });

    function hideArrow(dir) {
        if (dir == 'next') {
            $$('#slideshow .arrow.next')[0].style.display = 'none';
            $('ss_nav').style.paddingRight = 31 +'px'; // set padding to the width of right arrow    so it doesn't jump left/right when there's only one arrow
        } else {
            $$('#slideshow .arrow.prev')[0].style.display = 'none';
        }
    }

    function showArrow(dir) {
        if (dir == 'next') {
            $$('#slideshow .arrow.next')[0].style.display = 'block';
            $('ss_nav').style.paddingRight = 0;
        } else {
            $$('#slideshow .arrow.prev')[0].style.display = 'block';
        }
    }
</script>
       
</div>]]>
      </content>
    </page>
  </pages>
  <tags>
    <tag>
      <id>731</id>
      <name>green</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>2900</id>
      <name>sustainable</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>2858</id>
      <name>design</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>9679</id>
      <name>kitchen design</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>27669</id>
      <name>green kitchens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>27670</id>
      <name>water conservation</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>13684</id>
      <name>composting</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>16128</id>
      <name>earth friendly</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>12917</id>
      <name>ecofriendly</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>10142</id>
      <name>recycling</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>27671</id>
      <name>architecture</name>
    </tag>
    <tag>
      <id>2403</id>
      <name>diy</name>
    </tag>
  </tags>
</item>
