Everyone Said Stone Would Fail—Then This House Lasted 876 Years
Become a member for more content on Medieval Wisdom here 👇 / @medievalwisdom ======================================= Discover how medieval stone houses last 800+ years while modern homes fail in 60. Learn lime mortar techniques, rubble trench foundations, and thermal mass construction you can build TODAY. This 876-year-old stone house is still inhabited. Your new house? Designed to last 60 years. Medieval builders used lime mortar, rubble trench foundations, and thermal mass construction to create homes lasting 800+ years. Modern construction uses Portland cement, concrete slabs, and lightweight materials designed to fail within a lifetime. 00:00 SUBSCRIBE SECTION 1: PROOF OF LONGEVITY: 00:58 SECTION 2: THE SECRET - LIME MORTAR: 02:54 SECTION 3: FOUNDATIONS THAT LAST: 08:02 SECTION 4: HOW TO BUILD THIS TODAY: 11:20 SECTION 5: WINTER ADVANTAGE: 15:22 SECTION 6: PLANNED OBSOLESCENCE: 19:34 SOURCES Historical Examples: Saltford Manor House, Somerset, England (Built 1148 - continuously inhabited 876 years) Lincoln's Jews House (Built 1170 - 854 years old, still in use) Gothic Cathedral foundations (800+ years, minimal settlement) Notre-Dame de Paris oak pile foundations (survived since 1100s) Modern Studies & Data: UK Copper Sustainability Partnership (2024): "Average new build home lifespan: 40-60 years" Building industry research: Post-1980 homes leave housing stock at 0.4-1.7% annually Offsite Builder Magazine (2022): Manufacturers intentionally reduce product lifespans Victorian housing durability studies: Pre-1900 homes outlast modern construction Building Codes & Standards: International Residential Code (IRC) Section R403.1: Rubble trench foundations approved International Building Code (IBC): Lime mortar and traditional masonry standards New Zealand Government Building Standards: Thermal mass benefits for cold climates (zones 4+) Materials & Cost Data: Type S lime mortar: $15-25/bag (2025 pricing) Natural stone: $25-90/sq ft (regional variation) Natural hydraulic lime: $25-40/bag Stone house construction average: $380,000 (2,000 sq ft) Modern custom home: $316,000-$550,000 (2,000 sq ft) Technical References: Frank Lloyd Wright: "Dry wall footing" (rubble trench) - structures show "no heaving or settlement" Connecticut thermal mass case study (1980s): $1,650/year heating cost for year-round 72°F OSB sheathing lifespan: 60 years (introduced 1970s) Stone house testimony: 62.5% reduction in oil furnace consumption (2,000→750 gallons) Material Suppliers Referenced: U.S. Heritage Group Lime Works Traditional Lime Company Masonry suppliers (nationwide) Heritage restoration material networks Organizations & Resources: International Masonry Institute Preservation Trades Network State historic preservation offices North House Folk School (traditional building training) Yestermorrow Design/Build School SUBSCRIBE for more ancient wisdom that beats modern technology! 👍 LIKE if you're like medieval masters! DISCLAIMER: This content is for educational purposes only. Do your own research and consult experts before attempting any cooling modifications. We are not responsible for outcomes from following these methods. For content removal requests, contact [email protected] Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use. #StoneHouse #MedievalConstruction #LimeMortar #TraditionalBuilding #OffGridBuilding #Homesteading #SustainableConstruction #ThermalMass #RubbleTrenchFoundation #BushcraftShelter #PreparednessBuilding #HeritageConstruction #NaturalBuilding #Stonemasonry #TraditionalSkills #BuildingForLongevity #MedievalWisdom #ForgottenTechniques #AncestralKnowledge #SurvivalHomestead

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