The few things that attracted me to the Earthships concept was that each room was built into a horseshoe or U shaped pattern side by side with a greenhouse running along the front. The whole structure was built facing the southern sky which allowed for maximum light and warmth to enter during the cold winter months of the northern hemisphere.
What I found amazing about all this was that they were using old tires for the main support walls of the buildings.
The tires basically become 300lbs. bricks, which they encase in concrete (or even mud or stucco in other climates) and form the main outer wall.
The only problem is it is very time consuming to lay down each course of tires, fill them with soil and sledgehammer them and repeat to turn them into bricks and get the outside done with out a team of laborers.
I anticipate that, besides raising the money to start this, the work on the outside course will be the hardest work on this project.
I hope to rally some friends and strangers to come up to the work site, pitch in and help make the dream come true.
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| Glass bottle wall |
A lot of the inside walls and greenhouse and even bathroom can be done with pop cans or bottles and cement to create intricate designs while keeping the overall look and feel rugged.
Adding a fireplace in the larger rooms and a wood burning oven in the kitchen would keep you warm when you needed it while allowing you to prepare meals with herbs and vegetables picked from your greenhouse.
The windows along the whole front of the structure are ventilated and angled so that the plants and the inhabitants could benefit from the natural heating and cooling of the Earth. Skylights make the rooms brighter and more inviting.
The water can be collected into cisterns when it rains and stored for later use if you are not near a potable source of water. You can heat using a solar hot water heater or natural gas/propane for showering in comfort or doing dishes. inside the house the water used in the sinks can be recycled into the main planters of the house to keep the plants vibrant and healthy.
The shower water can then be used as greywater for the toilet, which eventually makes its way to the septic or black water containment facility (but more on that another time)
You could just hook this house up to the grid if it were available, but the cost of over $10,000 a hydro pole to your land could get costly.
Once I laid my eyes on the Earthships and how they sustain themselves I was hooked. I knew I wanted to build my own someday.
If you can help please donate here: http://www.kapipal.com/soeretreat
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