For the past three months or so, instead of writing this here blog from the comfort of a well-appointed office – cork floors, solar shingles powering the laptop – I’ve been needling the keyboard from our living room. I’ve set up temporary digs here because my real office – or at least the space I want to be my real office – is being eaten by ants. I speak, of course, of the 400-square-foot work studio that sits, forlorn and lonely, in our backyard.
It’s an incredible building – farmhouse siding, put up back when reclaimed wood was still called “used”, big barn doors, cedar shake roof, a flagstone table right outside the entryway. It’s not just a simple shed, either – it’s got a sink, a toilet, a skylight and its own heating system.

Before we bought the house, a sculptor had been renting the space from the previous owner, Paul. They had an extremely slow-moving arrangement that the sculptor would finish the studio – insulate it, put up the interior walls, generally make it into a nice place to be – but the sculptor, after God knows how long, only got as far as putting up a panel here or there of rigid foam insulation.
And that’s where the ants come in. Literally. The structure is built on a concrete slab that sits level with the surrounding ground, so when the ground gets wet – which this year has been habitually – that fashionably reclaimed siding soaks up a ton of moisture. And carpenter ants, of course, loves them some wet wood. They don’t eat it; they dig tunnels and live in it. But dry wood is too hard for them to chew. So when the wood dries out, they move on to the closest, softest, warmest option: the rigid foam insulation.
Until recently, I’d ignored the, shall we say, roughness of the space – it looked like a broken-down chicken coop – in favor of having an office, separate from the house, to call my own. (I work at home, and the line between being at home and being at work is often difficult to draw.) Whenever I was working late, I’d hear the pitter-patter of a thousand little feet above my head and in the walls – the ants were on the move. I mean, at some points I could hear them chewing; it was like some bug version of The Tell-Tale Heart. The Tell-Tale Carapace, perhaps? (Coming this fall from Pixar!)
So now I do my scrivening in the living room. Obviously, I need to figure out what to do with the studio. As it is, it sits unoccupied, getting quarterly sprayings of surely highly toxic pesticides. I'd rather tear it down, donate the siding to the local Resource Yard, repurpose the foam board as insulation for the house's crawlspace, and start all over again with a superinsulated straw bale building. But all that dreamin' means nothing if it'll cost me an arm and a leg. I’ve got some local architects coming over next week to check the place out. I’ll keep you posted.
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A reminder for you New Yorkers: I’ll be speaking at the BKLYN DESIGNS green remodeling panel this Saturday, May 12, at 4pm.
Interests: Practicing DJing, Feng Shui, Spirituality, Candle and Soap making, Yoga, Camping, Bicycling, Movies, Music
Inspiration: Music. Nature.
http://www.plentymag.com/features/2007/05/organic_insulation.php
Just received this through my Google "organic alerts." Looks like an interesting idea that might just be up your alley.
Let me know what you think.
Christy
Mother Earth's Farm
Where good things come from for the body and soil.
That's very cool -- insulation that's rown like mushrooms.
Seems like it's a ways into the future, though.
I sure hope you fix this one up, it has real character, just what's needed for a studio, and yes it does need alot of work, but after reading your column, this seems to fit you!
Good luck in continuing your greening quest, now for this ever so wonderful, soon to be handsome studio!
Fran
That really is an awesome studio. I wonder why the hurry to consider a full scale renovation though... (?) Is it REALLY unworkable? Would it be horrible to give it a good cleaning up and share the space with your little friends? How about redirecting the critters by building a sub floor or installing a more efficient drainage system in an attempt lower moisture levels? Rain barrels might help... Just a thought... It seems that finding a way to dry it out and keep it dry would resolve most of the secondary issues that you're trying to deal with. It's an incredibly quaint and delightful little space though. Good luck with it, keep us updated!
~ Greener today than I was yesterday!
Unfortunately the only way around the ants is to get the studio up off the grade. And even then I'm not sure we'd be rid of them -- their pathways to the studio are already pretty established, as are the multiple colonies that I'm sure encircle our property. We're under siege.
I agree that the area needs better drainage, but again, that means getting the structure up off the ground. It doesn't mean I need to completely level everything -- I could reuse much of the existing material, like the beams that make up the frame, and the rafters, and the plywood sheathing the roof. (The cedar shakes have to come off anyway, due to changes in the local codes: no shakes after 2012 or 2014. Might as well do that work now.)
And that's part of the issue. The building is really cool, and it "fits" with the rest of our property -- that, and why go to all the trouble of rebuilding if you don't have to?
Trouble is, I think I have to. I spoke briefly with an architect last week, and while he agreed that there were ways around a full-scale tear-down, he also agreed that keeping the structure at ground level like it is now (where the ants can get at it) is a major problem.
I mean, if I could just lift the whole thing up a foot or two and line the perimeter with something inedible -- concrete/styrofoam blocks, say, or even rocks -- I would. But the studio is already too close to its max height as allowed by code.