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Oct 29
2009
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Builders of the Pacific CoastPosted by Bruce Robinson in trees , Science , planning , open space , Ideas , housing , environment , design , coast , California , author , art |
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From remote cabins crafted of driftwood to stunningly beautiful and unconventional family homes, Bolinas-based writer and photographer Lloyd Kahn collects innovative individual builders up and down the Pacific Coast.
Below are two examples of the buildings featured in the book: The elbaorate temple built by SunRay Kelly at Harbin Hotsprings, and a whimsical gazebo made of driftwood on a Vancouver Island beach.

The farther north he ventured, the more Kahn found projects that had been built in substantial part from found materials—driftwood on the beaches, and fallen timber inland. He says that immersing himself in that world has had an enduring effect in the way he sees potential resources around him now.

Lloyd Kahn's first building experience was with geodesic domes, which led to his first book as well. But he eventually became disenchanged the domes, and turned his attention to the more generalized subject of Shelter, published in 1973. The success of that volume launched his Bolinas-based publishing business, which concentrates on books about do-it-yourself homebuilding, and health. He'll present a slide show drawn from Builders of the Pacific Coast at Copperfield's Books in Sebastopol on Thursday night, Oct. 29, at 7 pm.
For his next publishing project, Kahn says he will be narrowing his lens to focus on creative “micro” housing efforts, such as this work in progress.
The intricately ornamented staircase and loft below is yet another of the utterly unique homes Kahn has featured in Builders of the Pacific Coast.

With railroad tracks as one of its main features, the new Holocaust and World Genocide Memorial on the Sonoma State University campus looks both forward, and back.
Sculptor and art professor 
Santa Rosa City Schools Superintendent Sharon Liddell
The simple glyph we know as "the Peace Symbol" has become so universally used and recognized that it may come as a surprise to learn that it was actually created specifically as an emblem for nuclear disarmament exactly 50 years ago this year.
