About us

The Nolalu Eco Centre is a home and learning centre created to promote and teach skills and knowledge that are beneficial to our planet and help create healthy communities. For this, the Centre offers an ecology-centred learning environment, organizing house tours, quality workshops and special events. The Centre aims to inform and inspire all who visit, using available local resources as much as possible. Watch the video about the Nolalu Eco Centre
This video was made just before the Grand Opening last May 2007 by Morvision Video Productions Thunder Bay.

 

Hubert Den Draak and Jacomyn Gerbrandy immigrated from Holland in 1997. Hubert is an award winning filmmaker/photographer, and directed commercials and TV series for film production companies in and around Toronto, and has taught at Confederation College’s Film Program. Jacomyn is an experienced graphic- and web designer with many happy clients in parts of Canada and Europe, and loves to play the piano.
Hubert and Jacomyn have always shared a vision to lead an environmentally sustainable life style and to build their own “planet-friendly” home, powered and heated by sun & wind. They found the perfect place for it in the beautiful boreal forests of Northwest Ontario near Thunder Bay, and started construction of their Eco Centre in June 2006. Visitors and B &B guests of the Nolalu Eco Centre, experience first-hand what it is like to live in a house that doesn’t have any bills for electricity or heating, has minimal impact on our fragile eco system, and on top of that is healthy to live in!

the Nolalu Eco Centre

The Centre is located on 311 acres of boreal forest and fields near the village of Nolalu. Some of the features of this 4000-square feet state-of-the-art facility:

- It was built using 650 straw bales to create the exterior walls, covered by an 1-inch stucco shell on the inside and out. The straw provides an unsurpassed insulation value of approx. R-50, with “breathing walls” that continuously purify the interior air, temperature and humidity.

- Solar panels and a wind turbine to provide the power it needs.
- Solar collectors to provide domestic hot water through most of the year, with additional hot water coming from a clean burning wood-fired kitchen stove in winter.
- An optimal passive solar design makes sure the house stays cool in the summer, while soaking up the warm sunrays in winter.

- An on-demand water heater cuts back significantly on the consumption of natural gas to heat domestic water.
- Composting toilets cut back dramatically on the consumption of water, while providing fertile compost for the garden.

More Nolalu Eco Centre photos