Earthships Explained

An Earthship is a building with a soul.  Its designed as a self-contained, impact minimising land-based ’ship’ – constructed from what others throw away and designed to work in harmony with our environment. 

It is officially defined by its creator, the Biotect (as opposed to Architect) Mike Reynolds, as a building that conforms to the following six principles:

  • Built with natural/recycled materials
  • Thermal/Solar Heating and Cooling
  • Solar & Wind-generated (renewable) electricity
  • Water Harvesting
  • Food Production
  • Contained Sewage Treatment

Its also an answer to many of the problems that have been allowed to develop through the industrialisation and ‘modernisation’ of society into a mass consumer species.

Its a positive statement, a home that aspires to be more than a building – a sustainable and responsible way of life.

On the practical side

An Earthship is typically made up of an external wall of rammed-earth tyres, with a fully glazed, equatorially facing frontage; to maximise the passive solar gain from the suns rays.  The sides of the Earthship are surrounded by banked earth, creating a large thermal capacitor with which to store the thermal energy.  Throughout the day, when the air is warmer, than the earth thermal mass surrounding the earthship, thermal energy is absorbed into the tyre walls.  When the air cools, especially at night, the thermal energy is released by the tyre walls, equalising the temperature and providing a consistent ambient temperature throughout the year.     The layout is typically (but not limited to) a series of modular U-shapes, providing an optimal depth to the building to ensure that the rear living areas are comfortable, whilst the front atrium ’super-heats’ in the sun and yet not too far away to prevent the heat transfer into the rear tyre wall.  The design allows low winter sun to penetrate further into the building, whilst the high summer sun is contained at the front.  This is combined with natural ventilation openings to allow air to circulate, a further tool to regulate the internal room temperature.

Non-loadbearing walls may be constructed from numerous forms of recycled or natural materials.  Bottles and aluminium cans are often used to provide a honey-combed structure to the mortar or ‘concrete’.  The previously mentioned atrium formed by the full-frontal glazing, provides a prime habitat for food production.  Typically planters are constructed along the inside of the atrium, providing food, texture and shade for the occupants.

The roof structure is made of timber trusses, covered with a suitable material for capturing potable water.  This typically drains off the roof into large cisterns.  It is from this capture method and these cisterns that the water starts the first of four journeys through the Earthship.

(1) The water flows through the Water Organising Module (WOM) where it is filtered and pumped into a traditional header tank.  

(2) From here it is distributed as water for drinking, cooking and cleaning.

(3) The used water then becomes “grey water” that is course filtered and feed into the planters, providing water to the plants

(4) Grey water that remains after it has been though the planters is then pumped into the toilet cistern, where the resulting “black water” is flushed into a septic stank where it is broken down and allowed to leech into a reed bed, feeding the surrounding soil.

Hot water is provided primarily by solar hot water panels mounted on the roof of the Earthship.

Electrical power is provided via micro generation on site, be it solar, wind, mini-hydro or any other creative, renewable means.

The resulting building does not rely on typical mains utilities and does not contribute to the impact attributable to these large scale distributed systems.  As a result typical operating costs for an Earthship have been estimated at approximately US$100 per year.  This in itself affords a better quality of life with reduced living costs.

Share/Save/Bookmark

6 responses

Great website, lots of good info! We are also busy

Everson

Great website, lots of good info!

We are also busy with an earthship project in South-Africa see http://www.aardskip.com.

Any volunteers who love to come and help build an earthship information center in Africa is welcome. Tips is also welcome.

Ludwig

I am so impressed!!! You go, Mr. Biotect, this is

Wendy Mann

I am so impressed!!! You go, Mr. Biotect, this is a stellar example of how we need to change the way we live on this planet. I commend you for your work and your ideas! I want to build one too, this is my newest venture, to live sustainably! I will be spreading the good word, keep up the marvelous work!

I would be interested in reading about how the methods

Rodders

I would be interested in reading about how the methods employed to build earthship relate specifically to colder parts of New Zealand. I am interested in building a house constructed of recycled materials, however am concerned that the methods employed in building earthships which I understand have been historically built in much different climates would not cope with NZs climate…Please inform me! The thermal mass concept seems well suited to climates with extremes of temperature ie desert climates with extreme heat during the day and cold nights. How would an earthship perform in NZ where heating is a primary concern and the sun during the day may not provide enough energy to ‘charge’ the thermal mass?

We are in the finishing stages of our earthship in

Brian Gubb

We are in the finishing stages of our earthship in Ngaruawahia, Waikato. Internal gardens are doing fantastic. Temperatures differences between night and day are not as constant as we had hoped, but they are still pretty good.
Plenty of visitors come and visit so don’t be afraid to contact us. Brian & Karen Gubb

I also would like to know more about how earthships

Noreen Ng

I also would like to know more about how earthships perform in the opposite climate to where they were first designed. New zealand – wet, cold, with the primary concern being heat.
Also how do the NZ councils go with resource consent on earth ship construction. Any comments would love to hear them. Cheers

we are interesting in recycling project and save the earth.

Mark Zheng

we are interesting in recycling project and save the earth. our company speciliazed in used tire recycling plant. if somebody want devote in this project please contact with me frankly

Leave a comment

You can use these tags : <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>