Commissioned to design a low-impact, self-sustaining home in Ein-Hod, Israel, Tav Group architects employed hemp, limestone, and plaster in inventive ways.
Commissioned to design a low-impact, self-sustaining home in Ein-Hod, Israel, Tav Group architects employed hemp, limestone, and plaster in inventive ways.
Commissioned to design a low-impact, self-sustaining home in Ein-Hod, Israel, Tav Group architects employed hemp, limestone, and plaster in inventive ways.
Commissioned to design a low-impact, self-sustaining home in Ein-Hod, Israel, Tav Group architects employed hemp, limestone, and plaster in inventive ways.
Commissioned to design a low-impact, self-sustaining home in Ein-Hod, Israel, Tav Group architects employed hemp, limestone, and plaster in inventive ways.
Commissioned to design a low-impact, self-sustaining home in Ein-Hod, Israel, Tav Group architects employed hemp, limestone, and plaster in inventive ways.
Cannabis is good for more than just medicine—industrial hemp has its uses in eco-friendly architecture too. Haifa-based studio Tav Group built Ein Hod, an eco-minded home for artists, using hempcrete, a bio-composite made from hemp hurds, hydrated lime, and water with desirable thermal properties. Located on a hillside in a rural Israeli artist’s village, the
Architect Anat Soudry teamed up with Plain English to create a new-old kitchen in a historic brownstone. To gain needed space, Soudry inserted a bay window.
Commissioned to design a low-impact, self-sustaining home in Ein-Hod, Israel, Tav Group architects employed hemp, limestone, and plaster in inventive ways.