Part of me suspected that they were right. It was more than the assorted stimulants and narcotics that I was living on. This was 1980 and the law was on my tail and I thought that the world was going to hell in a handbag because Ronald Reagan had just been elected president. I figured it was time to get the fuck outta Dodge.
So, I went and put a down-payment on five acres of land just outside of Hillsboro, Texas. There was nothing on the land but some prickly pears and some copperheads. I needed a dwelling. I had always been interested in alternative housing, so I began paging through my Whole Earth Catalogues and my Dome Books.
I asked myself, "What does a person who has very little money and a lot of ingenuity and energy make his house out of?" I began thinking about construction methods and materials. What was strong and readily available? I remembered an old TV commercial where they built a bridge out of cardboard and a truck drove over it. If cardboard is arranged properly, it is a very strong material and very light and very cheap. So, I decided to build my house of cardboard.
The geodesic dome was the perfect design to be used with this material. Cardboard and domes both depend on integrity to provide strength. The corrugations in the cardboard and the tensegrity in the dome structure provide the strength. It was a perfect marriage of material and design.
So, armed with a matte knife and a straight edge and a jug of Elmer's glue, I began assembling the panels for my dome in a one bedroom studio apartment. There were forty triangular panels and I made some of them solid and some of them with windows or skylights. Cardboard is a very pliable building material and some very creative things can be done with it and it requires no power tools. It was like making a giant model airplane.
The obvious drawback of using cardboard as a building material is that it isn't waterproof. I solved this problem by impregnating the cardboard with polyester resin, the epoxy that they use to make fiberglass. This waterproofed the cardboard and made it more rigid.
Here is a picture of the result (still under construction). I lived in it for three years.

The front room was built of tombstones, but that's another story.