Lower Sioux Indian members using hemp product to build homes — and community

Tribal leaders believe using hemp will help address a housing shortage while promoting eco-friendly building practices.

By Katelyn Vue, Sahan Journal

September 30, 2023 at 8:24PM
Joey Goodthunder, the Lower Sioux Indian Community’s hemp coordinator, held up hurds, the inner woody parts of hemp stalks used to make hempcrete. (Dymanh Chhoun, Sahan Journal/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

MORTON, MINN. — Danny Desjarlais has worked in the construction industry for nearly three decades. In all those years, a house he's helped build this year stands out as his proudest achievement: a duplex made with the hemp plant.

The house, believed to be the first of its kind in Minnesota, is made with hempcrete, a material consisting of woody hemp stalks, limestone and water. When finished, it will provide emergency housing for members of the Lower Sioux Indian Community reservation in Morton.

"I've been on a lot of job sites and driven to a lot of job sites, and I never [before] felt emotionally attached to a job," said Desjarlais, hempcrete construction project manager for the Lower Sioux Community.

Desjarlais and others started the Lower Sioux Hemp Program to address housing needs on the reservation. They say hempcrete, an emerging material in the construction industry, could move home construction in a safer and more sustainable direction. The program includes farming hemp plants, manufacturing hempcrete and constructing houses.

Robert Larsen, Danny Desjarlais and Jesse Berry, members of the Lower Sioux Indian Community’s hemp program construction crew, on the porch of the tribe’s first hempcrete house. (Dymanh Chhoun, Sahan Journal/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

More than half the Lower Sioux Indian Community's 1,000 enrolled members live on tribal land. Larry Swann, director of the tribe's Dakota Future lending institution, said there aren't enough houses for members who want to live there; according to recent federal data, the reservation is about 200 homes short.

The first hempcrete house is slated to be ready for occupants in December. The one-story duplex doesn't look much different from other homes, but the 12-inch-thick walls are made of hempcrete, which resembles small wood chips stuck together when dried and finished. It's used to fill in wood framing for the interior walls and then covered with lime plaster.

Desjarlais said his construction team used about 8,000 pounds of hemp and installed the hempcrete in three days. It normally takes about three to four months to build a house of similar size using traditional methods and materials, he said.

"I don't want to build any other way now. I only want to build with hempcrete," he said.

Hempcrete is a relatively new construction material that gained traction in the United States after the 2018 Farm Bill legalizing commercial hemp production. Several countries, such as the United Kingdom and France, have built structures with hempcrete for many years. It's resistant to fire, mold and pests.

Hemp, a fast-growing herb used for industrial and medicinal purposes, is from the same cannabis species as marijuana but has less THC — the active ingredient that causes a high.

Hempcrete, inside a home being built by the Lower Sioux Indian Community.  (Dymanh Chhoun, Sahan Journal/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Because of hemp's ties to marijuana, some community members have been skeptical about using it to build houses, said Earl Pendleton, vice president of the Lower Sioux tribal council. "People thought you could smoke the house," he said.

Pendleton said that after reading an article about "25,000 uses" for hemp, he learned more about it and picked up the idea of building with hempcrete. "It can save you money, it's healthier for the environment, and it'll cut down on mold, pests and fire," he said.

Joey Goodthunder, hemp coordinator for the tribe, is in charge of farming, harvesting and processing the hemp plants. About 80 acres of hemp are grown on tribal land and farm fields scattered across neighboring land. Mature plants are harvested about three months after seeds are planted, he said.

Before harvesting, the plants are tested to ensure that their THC levels meet federal guidelines. Once the plants pass the test, Goodthunder harvests them and chops them into 30-inch lengths. The plants are left on the field for five weeks to rot, which helps separate the fibers from the hurds, the inner woody parts of the stalks used in hempcrete.

The plants are then rolled into bales and brought to a processing facility, Prairie PROducers, in nearby Olivia. Bales are placed one at a time into a BaleBuster, which separates the raw materials and funnels them into the facility's warehouse. A line of giant machines continues separating the materials until the hurds are extracted.

The final step is mixing the hurds with limestone and water. Depending on the project, there are different ways to build with hempcrete, such as spraying it or installing it as pre-dried blocks into traditional wood framing.

Swann believes that the tribe's hempcrete construction program is the first in Minnesota — and possibly the United States — to control the entire process from farming hemp to building houses. The competitive edge, he said, helps create job opportunities in the community and strengthens the tribe's economic growth.

"We have our own contracting entity that can bid on our grant-funded projects," Pendleton said. "There's no other contractors in the area who can offer natural building materials that are better for the health of the people and the homeowners' pocketbook."

About the partnership

This story comes to you from Sahan Journal, a nonprofit newsroom dedicated to covering Minnesota's immigrants and communities of color. Sign up for a free newsletter to receive Sahan's stories in your inbox.

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about the writer

Katelyn Vue, Sahan Journal

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