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Related: About this forumThese homes are off-grid and climate resilient. They're also built out of trash.
You'd never guess.
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Climate Solutions
These homes are off-grid and climate resilient. Theyre also built out of trash.
Earthships have long been an offbeat curiosity for travelers, but through the lens of climate change, they suddenly look like a housing haven
By Nick Aspinwall
https://twitter.com/Nick1Aspinwall
January 4, 2022 at 10:11 a.m. EST
Earthships were first built in the arid climate of Taos, N.M., maximizing abundant sunlight while using all they can from about eight inches of rainfall per year. (Ramsay de Give for The Washington Post)
TAOS, N.M. Mike Reynolds never worried too much as the world inched closer to doomsday. In the spring of 2020, motorists lined up in their cars outside grocery stores waiting for food as the coronavirus pandemic first wrapped its tentacles around the global supply chain. Next came an unprecedented surge of extreme weather as wildfires devastated the American West, hurricanes lashed tropical coastlines and a deadly winter storm brought the Texas power grid to its knees.
I was watching that on TV and then walking down the hallway of my building, picking bananas and spinach and kale and tomatoes and eating them. Barefoot, because my building was warm without fuel, Reynolds said. My Earthship took care of me.
Earthships are off-grid, self-reliant houses built from tires, dirt and garbage that have long been an offbeat curiosity for travelers passing by the ski town of Taos, but suddenly look like a haven for climate doomers. Residents of the 630-acre flagship Earthship community treat their own waste, collect their own water, grow their own food, and regulate their own temperature by relying on the sun, rain and earth, which Reynolds and other adherents call natural phenomena.
[At this Earthship community in New Mexico, renters can give sustainable living a try]
Reynolds, 76, has been building these structures he calls them vessels since the early 1970s when, after graduating from architecture school at the University of Cincinnati, he took up off-road motorcycle racing on the high desert plateau around Taos to try to injure himself to avoid being drafted to the Vietnam War. He never left, attracting interest and eyerolls as dozens of Earthships arose from the dirt.
{snip}
These homes are off-grid and climate resilient. Theyre also built out of trash.
Earthships have long been an offbeat curiosity for travelers, but through the lens of climate change, they suddenly look like a housing haven
By Nick Aspinwall
https://twitter.com/Nick1Aspinwall
January 4, 2022 at 10:11 a.m. EST
Earthships were first built in the arid climate of Taos, N.M., maximizing abundant sunlight while using all they can from about eight inches of rainfall per year. (Ramsay de Give for The Washington Post)
TAOS, N.M. Mike Reynolds never worried too much as the world inched closer to doomsday. In the spring of 2020, motorists lined up in their cars outside grocery stores waiting for food as the coronavirus pandemic first wrapped its tentacles around the global supply chain. Next came an unprecedented surge of extreme weather as wildfires devastated the American West, hurricanes lashed tropical coastlines and a deadly winter storm brought the Texas power grid to its knees.
I was watching that on TV and then walking down the hallway of my building, picking bananas and spinach and kale and tomatoes and eating them. Barefoot, because my building was warm without fuel, Reynolds said. My Earthship took care of me.
Earthships are off-grid, self-reliant houses built from tires, dirt and garbage that have long been an offbeat curiosity for travelers passing by the ski town of Taos, but suddenly look like a haven for climate doomers. Residents of the 630-acre flagship Earthship community treat their own waste, collect their own water, grow their own food, and regulate their own temperature by relying on the sun, rain and earth, which Reynolds and other adherents call natural phenomena.
[At this Earthship community in New Mexico, renters can give sustainable living a try]
Reynolds, 76, has been building these structures he calls them vessels since the early 1970s when, after graduating from architecture school at the University of Cincinnati, he took up off-road motorcycle racing on the high desert plateau around Taos to try to injure himself to avoid being drafted to the Vietnam War. He never left, attracting interest and eyerolls as dozens of Earthships arose from the dirt.
{snip}
CORRECTION
A previous version of this article incorrectly stated the type of water that is used to fertilize ornamental outdoor plants and can be safely released into the groundwater supply or used in the toilet. It is "gray water." The article has been corrected.
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These homes are off-grid and climate resilient. They're also built out of trash. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Mar 2022
OP
2naSalit
(86,536 posts)1. I've wanted one of these forever...
Never had the funds or ability to change my career life to do it. Now I am retired and can't afford to buy one and too old to build one.
I would love to live in one, though.
Nay
(12,051 posts)2. Agree. I've known about these since the 70's, since they were written up in Mother
Earth News. I always wanted one as well -- it just seems so sensible.
But that was 50 years ago, I am old as well, and it just ain't gonna happen.
2naSalit
(86,536 posts)3. That's when I heard about them...
Back when that guy got started. Always thought it was a great idea.