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Within a month of becoming president of the Santa Fe-based Permaculture Credit Union—a unique financial institution based, as the name suggests, on eco-friendly principles—Don Sarich had his first encounter with a skeptical government regulator.
Wednesday, 10 March 2010 |  Email | Read more
"Our Special Issue on Sustainable Building P+ BouwTrends has been published, this week." "I proudly present you the cover story on the Phoenix."
Tuesday, 09 March 2010 |  Email | Read more
  New 'Global Model' Earthship for sale MLS# 85443 $400,000. MLS #85443 send an email to biotecture@earthship.com or call 575-751-0462 for inquiries
Monday, 29 November 1999 |  Email | Read more
Congratulations to Jim Tulin of Nova Home Loans, our Arizona, New Mexico and Texas local myEnergyLoan provider. Jim is truly a shining star in our network and to his great credit he structured a finance program for an Earth Ship in Taos, New Mexico. This is a major accomplishment that he says he never could have done if it weren’t for myEnergyLoan and his status as a myEnergyLoan provider.
Monday, 29 November 1999 |  Email | Read more
Solar Power In the past the federal government would pay for 30% of a home solar-power system, with a cap of $2,000. But now the cap has been removed. Installing solar panels on your roof that produce 5 kilowatts -- enough to power an average-size house -- costs $40,000.
Thursday, 04 February 2010 |  Email | Read more
Most Versatile and Economical building design in the world. Recently Completed Projects: - Todos Santos, Baja, California - Texas Two bedroom green building - Montana Two bedroom green building Earthships are constructed with recycled materials and perform as expected in any part of the world, in any climate and still provide you with what you need to survive. Earthship Biotecture is based on 40 years of research and development by Michael Reynolds, principal architect of Earthship Biotecture. Call us at 575-751-0462 or send an email to biotecture@earthship.com for details. Earthship Sizes Studio - 800 sq. ft. One Bed - 1000 sq. ft. Two Bed - 1200 sq. ft. Three Bed - 1500 sq. ft. Construction Drawings 30 pages in color, three sets. 11 x 17, includes five CAD views. Includes details for trusses and vigas, two hours of free follow up consultation and one 'Ground Up' DVD Studio - $4,000 / 800 sq. ft. One Bed - $5,500 / 1000 sq. ft. Two Bed - $6,000 / 1200 sq. ft. Three Bed - $7,500 / 1500 sq. ft. Changes or custom modifications are available at hourly rates. Earthships generally cost about the same as conventional buildings cost in your area. The main difference is that Earthship come with all of their own systems. Conventional buildings do not and must be "plugged in". Designed to meet Standard Building Codes. All of our construction drawings are designed to meet standard building code requirements. Earthship Biotecture cannot guarantee your plans will qualify for a building permit. That is because before granting a permit, building code departments sometimes require changes or additions to architectural plans that have been submitted. Once we mail your final plans to you and you find they require changes for a building permit, we will do them for you at our normal hourly rates. After you receive your plans and you require modifications, including a redesign of your project or value engineering, Earthship Biotecture reserves the right to charge an additional fee to make these changes. Please note that we mail you your final plans only after you have reviewed them and given us your approval. Earthships provide security in economically unsecure times. Earthships cost about the same as a conventional home, but a conventional home does not come with all the electricity and water you will use. A conventional home is bad for the planet, is not strong and uses materials that require a lot of fossil fuels to manufacture and get to your building site. Earthships can provide you with carbon credits, tax incentives and a higher resale value. The "House" as an assemblage of by-products: A sustainable home must make use of indigenous materials, those occurring naturally in the local area. For thousands and thousands of years, housing was built from found materials such as rock, earth, reeds and logs. Today, there are mountains of by-products of our civilization that are already made and delivered to all areas. These are the natural resources of the modern humanity. An Earthship must make use of these materials via techniques available to the common person. In a time when mortgage payments take up 75% of monthly income, homelessness is an epidemic and the stress is becoming a disease, housing must return to the grasp of the individual. We can customize designs to meet your needs. your climate, your aesthetics. We can consult and guide you through building your own earthship with your local builders, laborers, codes, permitting, etc. If your county requires that you obtain a building permit, you will need a floor plan, and a local engineer's stamp. These are additional fees above the cost of these drawing sets. Earthship Biotecture can help you locate a local engineer to stamp the plans, and also provide plan development services at our hourly rates We can retrofit your home with earthship biotecture, so you can live more efficiently in terms of energy, water, economics, etc. When your home is more energy efficient, it becomes more valuable and less costly to operate. two bedroom global model earthship - green house at the bottom.
Sunday, 07 March 2010 |  Email
$122,000. Two bedrooms, Two bathrooms. 6 Main St., Guffey, CO Built in 1994 2,271 sqft Lot size - 1.53 Furnished All offers considered...turn key operation.. Water source is a natural spring .. Financing can be difficult... Water rights available for additional costs    
Thursday, 25 February 2010 |  Email | Read more
What are the ratio's for the scratch/finish coat?   The ratios are dependent on the clay content in your dirt. Scratch is typically 1 dirt  (sifted regular) to 2 sand. Finish is typically 1 dirt (sifted fine) to 3 sand (sifted fine). You will learn about the nature of your mud with the scratch coats. If it is not sticky enough, add dirt.  To sticky, add sand.  Cracks? Add sand. Play with the mix until you have the exact ratios you want. Do a test mix for the finish then stick exactly to that mix for every batch.
Monday, 29 November 1999 |  Email
Earthship Village Ecologies (E.V.E.) gets an initial coat on the second level roof. We have also observed (in the developed countries) a barrier  between the peoples of the world  and  an affordable carbon zero/sustainable living circumstance.
Friday, 09 October 2009 |  Email | Read more
Rationale Throughout the last forty years Earthship Biotecture has been working toward developing  a fully sustainable  prototype home  that has a zero carbon footprint on the planet.  We  arrived at this in the early 2000’s and are still perfecting and refining it. We have a building prototype that harvests its own electricity and water; contains and treats its own sewage;  and heats and cools itself without fuel and produces a significant amount of food.   The building is built from 45% recycled materials thus starting the construction of the building with a negative carbon footprint.  Discarded materials  take the place of new materials that require energy  to produce.  Also,  once used, discarded materials,   would have taken energy to dispose of.   There is no energy required to reuse  existing  materials.  This further  contributes to a negative carbon foot print at the birth of the building.     This building costs next to nothing to operate annually and is independent of all municipal utilities.   It takes full care of its owners and actually enhances the grounds around it due to the botanical cells which contain, treat and reuse the sewage via biological processes resulting in greenery.  This prototype has been evolved by Earthship Biotecture to be priced right in the ball park with conventional buildings of similar quality in all parts of the world. E.V.E. Image Gallery We thought we had  arrived  with this prototype... but change is the only constant in nature and reality .  This results in  evolution   being a never ending movement.   We now  (circa 2008 - 2009) see that a new crisis is at hand as the planet continues to  react to the effects of growing numbers of people and other natural forces.  This new crisis is the crashing economy.   Economy is a concept of the developed world through which the  sustenance of all people is achieved.   Perhaps just the concept itself is a mistake but we are deeply into it on this planet in the developed world.  As the economy crashed in late 2008, we realized that our product - a fully sustainable carbon zero home -  is  the product  of this age;   but  it must now  be delivered to the people of the world in a much more affordable way than conventional homes.   It must also be acquired  and  operate  independent of this thing called economy.   By its very nature it leans in the direction of being free from the economy in terms of operation but to acquire it is another issue, in most cases still dependent on the economy. The individual stand alone Earthship we have been evolving for so long provides individual sustenance.  Now we have  observed that there is a certain efficiency in small clusters of people sharing some aspects of the sustenance of life rather than each individually having there own methods of sustenance.   We have observed many people getting all of the necessities of sustainable living together in their Earthship only to feel isolated and alone after having achieved sustenance for themselves only.  We have thus observed a social need for people to interact and be near each other and, in fact, help sustain each other. We have also observed (in the developed countries) a barrier  between the peoples of the world  and  an affordable carbon zero/sustainable living circumstance.  This barrier  is the web of rules, codes, and regulations that were developed for the safety and welfare of the people but that have become obsolete and inapplicable as the earth and the populations have changed in recent years.   In effect humanity has been riding a horse for many decades and now we have arrived at a vast sea and we are beginning to realize that the horse is not appropriate to continue our journey on the sea.   We need a boat to travel further.  The existing regulatory forces push us into trying to make a horse that floats or a boat that looks like a horse.   Neither are the correct solution.  We need to abandon the concept of horse and think boat - affordable  boat.  Conventional living concepts, codes and  regulations do not even address this new circumstance...the EVE  project is an effort to  manifest it. Mechanism After years of lobbying, we finally got the Sustainable Development Testing Sites Act passed in New Mexico in 2007.  This piece of legislation allows testing of housing and living methods in a day to day living circumstance, with real people,  outside the incumbrance of conventional living concepts, codes and  regulations.  Special race tracks are used to test automobiles safely outside and apart from the public highway system. The EVE project, via the Sustainable Development Testing Sites Act, is a testing place  for housing and living methods that is safely outside and apart from the confines of the outdated regulatory system. We have chosen to use two acres of property  at the Greater World Sustainable Community in Taos, New Mexico that already has three older Earthships buildings on it. We want to take everything we have learned over the last few decades, incorporate the latest  dreams and innovations and demonstrate all of this in a more dense living  situation involving twenty-five people. We want to take the  Earthship sustainable design principles even further into high performance beyond regulations and economics because, like the horse and boat analogy above, a completely different concept of living is sorely needed on this planet in the early 2000’s. Recently an engineer who was just introduced to Earthships said  " what the world needs now is one billion of these immediately".   Our observation now is that even tho we have this home/product available and priced very much in the same ball park as conventional homes;  conventional homes (for many reasons) cost way too much.  We want to make sustainable housing more affordable than conventional housing.   In order to do this we must venture far outside the realm  of existing concepts, codes and regulations... thus the EVE project. In a conventional situation you can only take the six basic Earthship design principals and systems so far.  But within the test site scenario we will be able to experiment with methods that will  stretch and evolve these pricipals and render them more economical and thus available to more people. Right now, with other Earthship projects in the Greater World Sustainable Community, even with our variances from the county, to meet the code requirements for the heating and cooling systems, the electrical system, and the gray and black water systems is ridiculously expensive - i.e., out of reach for many people and very stressful to obtain for others.  It is a blessing that we are allowed to even use our systems in this community, but to fit them in to the conventional scenario is wastefully and inappropriately expensive. If there are no limiting, short sited regulations to meet, we could still address all of the recognized issues related to health and safety, but in totally new and different ways that would be much more affordable.  Conventional codes and regulations by their very nature are not capable of allowing rapid evolution on a major scale and this rapid evolution is possibly the only way for us get out of the jeopardy we are in on this planet.  The developed world  has placed itself in a precarious corral that someone or something has to force us out of... the EVE project is that force.   Escape from Economy In late 2008 and early 2009 the economic crisis on the earth has become so significant that it, however shallow, has begun to overshadow even the climate crisis. The EVE project will address the economy of people living in harmony with the planet and with each other but  much more independent of the global economy and thus not near as  dependent on it.  This village will aim to finance itself. We already make buildings that make their own power, harvest their own water and heat and cool themselves so there will be no utility or infrastructure expense.  We’re building with 45% recycled materials so  that elliminates some of  the cost of new materials. We, Earthship Biotercture, have a growing number of interns coming to learn the methods of Biotecture living.   We will use this small army to launch the EVE project.  This will result in very affordable housing for these people.   The interns that work on EVE will live at EVE.   They will be eating food from the planters of the buildings they live in. They will be using water from the sky here.   They will be using electricty from the sun and wind.  They will be using the toilets here and taking showers and making the plants grow from their waste water.  It will be a self-contained system based on the six design principles of the Earthship concept.  It will address the issues people need for sustenance. What we are trying to do here is illustrate that...the sustenance of people (shelter, water, energy, sewage, food and comfort) should not be subject to an economy. The economy is a game.  This game should be about nonessential things (motorcycles, computers, televisions).  A person feeding their family, staying alive, having shelter...   that should not be subject to an economy. .  We should have truley sustainable villages that  provide a life  independent of the economy...  and what better way to create them than to  have a building prototype that doesn’t need any utilities, produces food, is made of recycled materials and is easy enough to build, that unskilled people can do it. The whole EVE concept embodies an education that can be shared around the world.   People can come for short or long  periods of time, live here super cheap in terms of a rent payment and everything else is provided.   They can eat here, they can drink here, they will have all of the basic essentials of life here.   We’ll have flat screen tvs and high speed internet which are essential to some .  We will have so much of what people need here that they won’t have to take trips in to town as often. We will be providing in our own non-economic system, the things that people need, in a green and sustainable way. As the years went by and more and more global problems were presented by the media, we kept incorporating responses to these problems  into the Earthship concept. This is how we developed the six design principles.  Well,  now there is another problem which has become the sole highway on which all of life is delivered... they call it the economy.  We are taking a left turn off of this erroding highway and carving a path out into the mesa and beyond.  We are calling this path E.V.E.. Global Model for a Good Virus I am hoping that we can do this on multiple formats throughout the world and that it will make such a statement that global entities like, Australia, Asia,  Europe and the US will look at this possibility... neighboring, sustainable, independent villages that constitute a town or a city.   It’s not about making anybody rich.  It is not about tax dollars.   It’s about the sustenance of people.  If governments all over the world subsidize methods of people taking care of themselves in  carbon zero village formats instead of wars over resources,  then we walk out of jeapardy and into a long lasting peace on earth.  Currently, since sustenance depends on economy, we have  people all over the world who are starving, don’t have enough water, have no shelter, and live in constant stress and misery.  This effects the global ambeance.   Now it’s even happening in the US.   Homelessness is more severe than ever.  There are tent cities.  Just desperate people, like any one of us, who used to have a life.  Then all of the sudden they lost their jobs and their mortgage and consequently their life.  Life should not float on an economy.  Life should have its own wings. E.V.E. can provide those wings to all peoples. So every step of this EVE project is about learning to live without dependence on any other systems...  political, economic or utility.  The village is the system.  It  can be replicated and grouped with other similar villages to become a town.  This can happen on a larger scale with many villages becoming a city.  Then it can happen on a country or a global scale but it starts with sustainable villages that provide for themselves via the Earthship concepts that have already proven  themselves to be able to stand alone.   E.V.E. is a petry dish for development of a good virus. We are talking about eliminating the stress of living on the people and the planet.   If countries make their first priority providing people with the knowledge of how to provide for themselves in a village circumstance then peoples livelyhood will not be subject to the ups and downs of an economy.  All the thinking and energy  goes towards evolving the village toward  the care of people and planet.    The Native Americans taught their children how to survive on the Earth.   The E.V.E. project will present to people  the knowledge of how to survive in a situation that does not depend on the economy, politics or fossel fuels. Reduction of CO2 Footprint Another issue that is coming in to play in conventional building these days quite a bit is freight;   the shipping of materials from China to to the US or from Taiwan to the US or even Oregon to New Mexico is being viewed as an energy waste and a CO2 impact. We should be building with materials that are all from within one hundred miles of the place they are used regardless of whether  they  be manufactured materials or recycled materials.  And the same is true for food.  It is ridiculous to buy food grown hundreds of miles away.  That is, again, an energy waste and a CO2 impact. We can grow everything in the Earthship homes that you can grow anywhere in any tropical climate. That eliminates freight. E.V.E. will eliminate the giant carbon footprint of a banana from South America or a building product from across the country.  We will  harvest all kinds of food from E.V.E.  and building products from the near by town of Taos, New Mexico.  You take our banana and put it right next to a grocery store banana that came from South America or whatever and you have a giant carbon footprint on one banana and no carbon footprint on the other.  The same is true of a building product. The village produces what it needs and maybe trades with other villages near by.  The strength is in the independence from centralized utilities and food production.  There will be an inherent economy  that is woven in to the natural phenomena that already exist on the Earth. So the E.V.E. project is about all of these things, power, water, sewage, food, recycled materials and the economy and a way to live that is more like what i would call  direct living.  I call it direct soft impact living.  It puts people in a position that they can relate to the economy as if it were a swimming pool that they can dive into for a swim if they want to, but when they want to get out, their life is out of the swimming pool and remote from it and not dependent on it. Swimming in the economy is a game, it’s a recreation, it should not be  the thing  betyween us and life.  That is a big part of what the EVE project is all about... evolution beyond economics  made possible through a living vessel that provides all of the essentials and has no carbon foot print. E.V.E.  ...  this cluster of twenty-five people living on two acres  will be a seething, intense hive of human activity  that will be on display to some extent.  It’s not going to be luxurious, but it will be magnetic in terms of pulling in energy from congruent quadrants of logical thinking.     “Live simply so that others may simply live.”   The less you have, the less you have got to lose.
Thursday, 25 February 2010 |  Email
Lumberjacking hijinks & feats of eco-friendly strength on distant mountaintops! Sustainable harvesting at its most entertaining, for reals. Enjoy.   VIGA RUN (with titles) from Jessica Reeder on Vimeo. WOW - that is a crazy amount of work. Thanks for sharing the video. One of the best parts was the dude who said “hi mom” - very cute.  All of you must have been super sore after such a rough day!
Monday, 29 November 1999 |  Email
This is still in the development stages, patent pending, no financing structure to support it, no cost estimates... but interesting none the less (I've made this a long post, but its still shorter than the article, having had most of the fluff cut out.) www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/dec/...ent-carbon-emissions from the article: "The new cement, which uses a different raw material, certainly has a vast potential market. Making the 2bn tonnes of cement used globally every year pumps out 5% of the world's CO2 emissions - more than the entire aviation industry. And the long-term trends are upwards: a recent report by the French bank Credit Agricole estimated that, by 2020, demand for cement will increase by 50% compared to today...
Monday, 29 November 1999 |  Email | Read more
by Michael Reynolds WHY IT IS GOING TO BE DIFFICULT FOR HUMANITY TO EVOLVE SIGNIFICANTLY ENOUGH TO SURVIVE A CHANGING PLANET Bergen Architectural School  - BAS -  Bergen, Norway  -  December 7, 2008 We (Earthship Biotecture) were asked to help establish a force to retro fit the old nine story concrete agricultural grain silo building, home of the architectural school in Bergen, Norway.  Our objectives were as follows...
Sunday, 07 June 2009 |  Email | Read more
By Jessica on March 21st, 2009 from uprooted.jessicareeder.com    Bottle Brick Bathroom, originally uploaded by Earthship Kirsten If you’ve been following my Earthships adventure, you know that it is actually possible to build houses using garbage. Can and bottle walls—literally walls made out of mud or cement, with cans or bottles set like bricks—are one of Mike Reynolds‘ time-tested innovations, a building technique that can have amazingly artistic results.
Monday, 29 November 1999 |  Email | Read more
$400,000. MLS #85443 send an email to biotecture@earthship.com or call 575-751-0462 for inquiries The 'Global Model' Earthship features Michael Reynolds' latest in Earthship technologies and design. The separate greenhouse separated from the main living space allows for superior temperature control. The home features cooling through tubes buried in the berm behind the home. The roof will slope to the north allowing higher ceilings near the windows. The three bedroom, two bath design makes this home perfect for families. As construction continues, this would be a perfect time to make an offer on this home while you still would have the opportunity to specify interior finishes. The front door opens up directly into the greenhouse which also serves as the main hall for the home. In a few months, this will be filled with a lush green jungle of plants taking water from the home's gray water system and filtering the water through their roots. The first of the homes 3 bedrooms sits at its far west end. Glass doors and windows bring in light from the greenhouse. Tires filled with rammed earth make the exterior walls, while the adjacent room is separated by a can wall. Later on all of these walls will be plastered and a permanent floor will cover the dirt.   The home features two bathrooms - both plumbed with both fresh water for the sinks and showers, and gray water for the toilets. This bathroom is near the two smaller bedrooms and kitchen. Behind it is a pantry area that will also house the home's laundry equipment.   Looking out the home from the main kitchen and living area, the high desert and mountain views create a pleasing panorama.     Michael Reynolds and Earthship Biotecture are building this 3 bedroom , 2 bath earthship in the Greater World Community. The picture above shows the south elevation with the exception that the walls will have a stucco covering rather than the stone facade shown here. (click on picture for a full size version). The home is sized and price comparable to similar traditional homes in the Taos area so sustainability meets affordability in a home sized for family livability. Earthship Biotecture even guarantees that annual utility bills for this home will not exceed $100 per year (contact broker for details)! As seen from the west, those familiar with earthship design will note both similarities and differences from previous Earthships. The top of the green house is the highest point of the house and features an operable ventilation box to exhaust hot hair. The photovoltaic panels sit at the top of the greenhouse. The primary doors to the home enter through the greenhouse enabling this space to serve as an airlock thus further separating interior living space from the outside air. The floor plan shows the layout of the rooms. The greenhouse contains most of the homes gray water planters. Here the plan shows how it runs the entire length of the home. The left (west) side shows the home's two smaller bedrooms, each entered from the greenhouse. The next section of the house features a bathroom toward the front and a laundry/mechanical room to the back. The bathroom faces the greenhouse, while the laundry mechanical room comes off of the kitchen area of the great room. The great room forms the heart of the home and sits at its center. The kitchen and dining area occupies the west section, while the living area sits to the right. A cold weather drape allows this room to be either opened or closed to the greenhouse depending upon the temperature preferences of the residents and the warmth level in both areas. The right (east) end features a spacious master suite - complete with its own bath. Work started on this earthship during the summer of 2008 and workers are busy constructing this home. Now would be a great time to place this unique, beautiful, and innovative home under contract to have it customized to your desires. Local Information Taos Webb Visitor's Guide Skiing: Taos Ski Valley: Map showing HelioHouse/Ski Valley/ Taos River Rafting: Los Rios River Runners Native Sons Adventures Big River Rafters Hiking etc: Carson National Forest Museums: Taos Art Museum Van Vetchten-Lineberry Taos Art Museum Hot Air Balloon Rides: Pueblo Balloon Company Touring: Taos Pueblo Shopping: Map: Taos historic district (pdf) Map: Town of Taos (pdf) Close by: Visit Angel Fire, New Mexico Places of Worship: Taos Jewish Center List of Churches in Taos  
Saturday, 27 February 2010 |  Email
 

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