ISN'T IT FANTASTIC HE'S STILL GOING AND SO AHEAD OF HIS TIME, TIMES ARE JUST NOW CATCHING ON DUE TO UNAFFORDABLE HOUSING AND ENERGY WASTE. I WISH I COULD DO ONE I'VE WANTED THIS DREAM FOR 40 YEARS NOW AND STILL PRAYING GOD ALLOWS THIS FOR ME BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE
I see the design hasn't changed in the last decade. This tells me things got perfected early on. Respect to Michael Reynolds and what he went through to get here.
I remember discovering Earthships and Michael when I was in high school over 12-14 years ago. I absolutely love this biotecture and spent one evening at the Phoenix earthship about 5 years ago and all those years of learning and wanting to experience it first hand did not disappoint. I am 30 now and live in Chicago, but not a day goes by where I am not daydreaming about building myself an earthship out here in Illinois one day, and eventually want build something like this in Colombia one day too. Thank you Michael for continuously bringing this knowledge to the world.
I love how the design of the Earthship has been refined over the years! Some people have watched cult films such a Rocky Horror Picture Show a gazillion times. I have watched Garbage Warrior! It never gets old. With deep appreciation for what the Earthship Biotecture community create!
You Guys!!! You can rent an Earthship. Earthship Nightly Rentals at their headquarters, in Taos, New Mexico, USA. We rented The Picuris for a night & I actually cried when we left! It was so beautiful & comfortable. I loved it. 🎉🎉🎉 Michael is a legend in his own time (as someone posted here already). It's True.
A dryer in a sustainable house: that shows 2 things. How power efficient is the house AND how Americans can't live without a dryer. I guess a British version of an Earthship would have a kettle and a beer tap. Greetings from Adelaide Michael. Glad to see you still kicking and doing the good work. You haven't aged a bit!
Dryers destroy clothes at an accelerated rate requiring you to buy more clothes more often. Hang drying is superior in every way and clothes last much longer.
Hanging wet clothes in a desert would mean dust encrusted dry clothes n towels I hang 1/3 of laundry for various reasons but rly love dryer for linens n towels n and jeans ESP in winter, not to mention rain UGH Y’all have rly mild winters n no rain I guess
IMAGINE if All residential buildings were made with this "common sense" type of construction wisdom. What a world it would be. Great to see you looking so well Michael. Greetings from Ontario, Canada.
Beautiful home, genius design. I was born in Albuquerque NM but i didn't grow up there unfortunately. I would love to come back to my home land and see these amazing houses. You're doing such great work Michael you deserve a noble prize. May you live to be a hundred and ten so you can continue this much needed work. Thank you.
Earthship's are my favorite type of dwelling! And I did go visit the Earthship in Taos set up at the visitor center. Loved it! Loved Taos. It is through your heroic work Michael that these wonderful homes exist in the world. Thank you
Hahahaha, I say the same thing. I don't care if the house is 5 mill or more, if it isn't an Earthship, it's a royal POS! Such an awesome concept no matter where you live!
Wow! This Earthship is incredible! Michael Reynolds' innovative design and sustainable approach are truly inspiring. The self-sufficiency and eco-friendliness of this home are something we should all strive for. Thanks for the insightful walkthrough! 🌍🏡✨
Dear Michael, you´ve been a teacher to me for many years, the didactics of your explanations are awesome. Thank you for showing us and teaching a more friendly, afordable, logic, harmonic and naturewise way of life. Keep safe
I’ve been following Michael and seeing him at and gone to his seminars twice over the last 30 years. It's a far superior way of living. I've been in an Earthship AirBnb at HQ, and it provides peace and tranquility. You don't hear furnaces or fans or anything to keep it comfortable in the winter. Just open up the greenhouse to let out the humidity for a few minutes and close it back up, and you're still toasty warm. It's incredible work. I was there in January, and I think this one was being built when I visited. It's amazing work. There's a seminar in October and I suggest go while you still can see the master in his element. And on top of that, Taos, New Mexico is a great place to visit. Also much to my surprise, our ships are becoming known when I talk to people from all over from Maryland, Pittsburgh to San Francisco to London England to Poland.
I can't wait to visit the earthship community in Taos NM and hopefully meet Mike Reynolds and buy him all the margaritas he wants. Such an amazing concept from an underappreciated Genius! I always get so frustrated that I never thought of all this but appreciate the hard work and efforts that this guy made into reality. I'm sure he has dealt with so much pushback and naysayers saying that this will never work. I applaud this guy every time I see a new video by him. Absolutely Amazing. Mike Reynolds, you are beyond Awesome status!
So beautiful!! Such a dream of mine. The only thing I'd change is the location - I'd have to have my dream home where I could not hear other humans (the road). I wish so much I had grown up under different, less traumatic circumstances so I could have made clear headed decisions to be around this type of culture instead of constantly being in fight or flight mode. Oh well, next life!🕉️ Jeez, to have those windows and a year round round garden in my home, what an amazing dream! I think I've watched every single video I can find of yours throughout the years - Atlantis 😍❤
Great work Michael! You are looking great! The audio is perfect...thanks for the improvement. Next step is a 360 video camera that will allow for smoother video.
What a great result. I was particularly impressed by the common sense approach to the utilities, as well as your comment on the construction tools being powered early on due to the timing of the solar installation. A logical and beautiful plan in keeping with the ethics of the build. Complimenti!
In following the recirculating water system I missed whether it involves a septic tank or does the garden act as one! This dwelling is really a great way to coexist with earth! Thank you!
There is usually still a septic tank and external drain field for black water. The way the concept works is it utilizes rain water collection, which goes to the sinks and showers. The water then drains into the planters across the front, watering the plants. After being filtered by the planters, the water is then used by the toilets. From there it runs through a standard septic tank out to a drain field, watering a small patch of external plants. The kitchen sink depends on your location. Some areas consider the kitchen sink black water, so it goes straight to the septic tank, others let it go to the planters just like the bathroom sinks/showers.
@@TwilightMystsyeah, good rundown - typically the blackwater seep field for an earthship will have a no-edible-plants rule too, but that doesn't mean you can't plant a native pollinator garden on it.
Have you guys ever thought about building a microclimate structure that is * primarily * for food production? That seems like the next step if there were a next step… especially thinking about redesigning communities and local food systems. A man comes to mind in Nebraska who built a burmed greenhouse and used cooling tubes to control temperature. He has mature citrus trees and other tropical fruit that produce year-round.
I've kicked around building a cross between an Earthship and a Chinese greenhouse. Unfortunately land and construction is too expensive, so I would either need a bunch of crowdfunding to pay for it, or take out a loan and make it into a profitable business.
He is a walking, talking miracle and genius. God only made one Michael Reynolds. I pray that Jesus will bless him always and keep him healthy, happy and prosperous!!! AMEN!! He is THE BEST of THE BEST!!
Hadih🤲 Sne kalyegh 🤲 Wow, can't believe how much simpler than the older Earthship ship homes. I just seen the earlier video of this particular home from the beginning.
Amazingly simple and yet, logical way to heat/cool/capture water and distribute within a home. Love the botanical greenhouse along the south side. Instead of using tires, I assume this design can be modified if using regular rammed earth on the north side, and can include solar tubes to capture and light up the bedrooms during the day without the use of electricity. Bravo, either way!
I hope to build one using rammed earth some day. I am confident it is perfectly usable. As for the lighting, they are usually designed so that light from the front windows goes through the greenhouse into the rooms. It will vary with the time of year, but it should cover most non-reading light needs.
those solar light tubes are pretty, and interesting to look at, but they're horrible for the longevity of a roof, having a penetration like that. I'd just go with a dimmable light for each room. There are very pleasant LED lights now, and they use very, very little electric power.
Fantástico!!! Adorei tudo o que vi. Um sistema de ventilação incrivelmente prático. O que mais gostei, mesmo, foi o sistema rotativo da água do chuveiro, filtrado pelas plantas e retornado ao vaso sanitário. Aqui em casa, que fica na cidade, também utilizo energia solar off grid; captação e filtragem de água da chuva para 70% das atividades da casa; reaproveito a água da máquina de lavar e do chuveiro para as descargas, só que tudo feito com filtros convencionais. Mas eu ainda chego lá. Congratulações de Tatuí/SP/BR 🇧🇷
Have you scrapped the garden in front of the house that received the toilet flush water? Is the Refuge on a septic tank system instead? Would the cooling tube system be adequate for humid Tennessee summers? Awesome what you have achieved, Michael.
I would love to hear from some people who have lived in these for a number of years. I knownthe design has changed over the years and improved , but it would be good to get an honest warts and all feedback. My concern is that they wouldn't hold the heat in enough during winter
If you are concerned about winter, you could add extra insulation, put heavy curtains to close when the sun isn't out, and add an alternate heating source (gas, electric, wood stove...) to make up the difference. I plan to put a rocket mass heater in mine. I heard a story about a monolithic dome that ran out of gas for heating during a blizzard. It took two or three days before they even noticed. Another story, an Earthship (I believe in Canada) had to put in a conventional heating system for regulations purposes, but almost never needs it. I suspect if you put some extra effort into handling cold temperatures, you would be just fine.
There are designs that include a second greenhouse for builds in very frigid climes. Being surrounded on three sides by insulated thermal mass, thick foam in the ceiling, the constant 55F earth below, and glass south face (or2) add up to extreme thermal performance. I really can't see lack of heat being an issue in this kind of structure. I see that some people are concerned about high humidity in these earthships. I wonder about that, too
Using a toilet with built in bidet will help conserve trees used for making toilet paper and will go a long way to keeping your pipes, septic fields, and septic tanks from getting clogged and filled up with unnecessary waste.
If there is a RU-vid channel who wants to build this for my son and I, I own eight acres in rural Kentucky, no zoning, no restrictions and no permits needed. Build, and film and share. Publicize your channel, give tours whatever you want until we get the keys to the home.
Going to be building a new home soon, and Earthships were my first choice. The problem is I live in Alaska, and we simply don't get enough solar in the winter to use this type of design. I will be building using the same outward design, but I will need far more insulation and a heating system to survive our winters. I have been looking at strawbale construction, but my wife and I are still in discovery stage.
Rammed earth walls are beautiful, and can have quite a bit of insulation inside. Down sides are that they are VERY thick walls, cutting into your usable square footage, they are almost as labor intensive as rammed tire walls, and are probably more expensive (I believe rammed earth mixes in around 10% cement as a binding agent, though a lot of earthships use cement as a filler on the tire walls, so I could be wrong about which costs more.)
Michael Reynolds has designed earthships that include a second greenhouse, which adds functional space and an extra thermal buffer from outside temperatures. The other (less initially expensive) way to go would be to rely more on chemical fuels, and just have an insulated rammed earth south face with minimal windows. you won't get a livable greenhouse, and you'll have to deal with the grey water in a different way, but it's doable. I wonder if anybody at Earthship Biotecture has tried to do an automated curtain that goes clear across the greenhouse glass at night
@@OnlyFactsPlease I wish it were that simple. In Alaska there simply isn't much sun in the winter, and Earthship designs use thermal energy to achieve their temperature equilibrium. If you spend 3-4 months with no thermal energy that thermal mass is going to get brutally cold at -20F. In summer we get A TON of sun, winter not so much. Wood heat is my best choice at that point, with superior insulation. Ergo, looking into straw bale construction to stay as natural building as possible. That being said, I can build to the same design as the Earthship with a lot of the same features. The greenhouse would have to shut down in the winter, but I can do that no problem. I use a Separett toilet and biocompatible soaps so no real issues with grey or blackwater.
A Facebook Friend of mine by the name of James Anderson invented an Organic Waste to Biofuel System called ORB that can power homes on what goes in the toilet 🚽. I bet you and he could have some interesting conversations, Michael!
Still innovating as per usual - Awesome ! Great to see you still good enough for Taos Mike. I still think you should consider low voltage circulation fans in the bedrooms to force cross ventilation with the cooling tubes flow. Also the rear should also have a water spout nearby to clean the cistern or roof. Any interest in algae-bioreactor tank on south glazing?? Thanks Mike God bless.
Hi. How are you? I really like all the concept, the house, everything however can i adapt this system to a house in the city? How can I do if i don't have a big land and neighbours next to me? Is that possible?
Need more storage in theses. Bigger pantry and how about a root cellar? If you can or dehydrate food you need a place to store the supplies for doing that and the food you canned or dehydrated. Also you will still need a garden , or bigger green house to grow enough food to feed you. If you mend your clothes, sew or craft you need storage for those supplies. Composting toilet they used to do would be better. Add the permaculture principles to the earthship principles and you will bring more of supplying your needs home, and community,
Use your trash to build another earthship!😉Joking aside, this kind of home is built off-grid, usually meaning away from cities' trash infrastructure. Basically, if it isn't metal or glass, it just gets burned. and the metal and glass bottles can be used to build more Earthships!
This looks like an awesome home design, but running the shower drain directly to plants doesn’t make sense to me? What if someone has to rinse chemicals off of themselves, or if they need to use soap?
I love the design of this earthship... pure genius! I have full intentions of living in one someday soon. BUT... if I have to build one myself, how do I go about getting a reluctant spouse/family on board with living rustically until the earthship is finished? Being on fixed income, I cannot afford to put them up in a rental while I build alone... and that's a LOT of work. Hopefully, I will be able to find a finished one for sale or rent that I can afford... then I will be able to attend the earthship academy and start building my own... I hope.
Depending on your local climate, perhaps get a yurt or dome tent to live in? You should be able to build one for under $100k, and they can get fairly nice inside. The fixtures and appliances (kitchen counters, sink, fridge, bathroom sink, toilets, shower fittings, wood stove, etc...) could be moved into the earthship when it was done, and the tent itself could probably be resold. I suspect the net loss would only be around $25k, and you can make that back just on 2 years of not renting an apartment. The big challenge is that earthships are very labor intensive to build. Paying someone else to do it is very expensive because of the time, but doing it yourself means either spending years to build it on nights/weekends, or quitting your job to work on it full time and get it done in 6-12 months. Either way, they aren't really any cheaper to build than a regular house. The savings come later from not having utilities, and having the peace of mind of being more self-sustaining.
@@TwilightMysts This does nothing to answer my question- how to get family to live rustically while building... my tribe refuses to live in any tent. I can't even get them to camp with me. I'm retired, so I don't have to limit my building to weekends, etc. I'm not sure how I will accomplish this, but I will...
the higher up you mount the water reservoir the more pressure you get from it regardless of volume. It's a principle of physics and it is demonstrated on youtube.
It is trade-offs. You won't generate much pressure unless you raise the cistern several dozen feet. But if you do that then you will need a pump to get the water into it, and you will lose the in-ground cooling effect.
You get about half a pound of pressure per foot of elevation . I think the benefits of cooling in ground out way the amount of height required to get enough pressure.
@@kazzana9013 "half a pound of pressure per foot of elevation" No that's really not the case and you don't need a large volume ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-EJHrr21UvY8.htmlsi=dOXy_sEip7KoYgga See Pascal's barrel experiment