Exploring Off-Grid Earthship Homes - Ultimate Efficiency?

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июн 2024
  • Exploring Off-Grid Earthship Homes - Ultimate Efficiency? Go to privacy.com/mattferrell to get $5 free money! Renewable energy and EVs are just a few pieces of the puzzle for achieving net-zero living. But what if we could combine eco-friendly building materials, energy efficiency, and sustainability, like a passive house, but being heated and cooled by the ground without relying on the electrical grid? It's time to get on board an Earthship ... it's a house ... not an actual ship. What are they, where can they be built, and are they worth it?
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  • @UndecidedMF
    @UndecidedMF  2 года назад +46

    What elements of an earthship do you think make the most sense for wider adoption? Special thanks to Privacy.com - go to privacy.com/mattferrell to get $5 free money!
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    • @OpenBiolabsGuy
      @OpenBiolabsGuy 2 года назад +2

      The problem with these is, as with most green tech, the cost. As long as homes like these are out of the price range of the lower middle class and upper lower class, they’ll never become common enough to make the dent they need to make.
      I mean, earth ship proponents SAY it’s cheaper to build, but then you look at the actual bill/quote for making one as compared to just buying a conventional house on the market and you can see how the cost of entry keeps most of us out of the party.

    • @vroomfondel5447
      @vroomfondel5447 2 года назад +2

      Do they pass the building code? Or will the government come and knock your house down to protect you unless you live somewhere out of reach?

    • @eliinthewolverinestate6729
      @eliinthewolverinestate6729 2 года назад +8

      Thank you Matt. I am planning on building an earthship out of concrete block and stone. Big fan of rockwool insulation. It will be first time I use comfort board under concrete floor. Usually use pink rigid foam insulation under concrete floor. The floor will steal thermal mass if not insulated good. Windows will be vertical. I have already driven down a point well and it flows. I have a ram pump to pump the water. Sewage is one of the expensive things I must deal with in karst area. Building old world masonry stove/heater. The only issue on code so far was d.c. instead of a.c. smoke detector. Going all d.c. for electric. The labor on a tire is way more than me to work to buy block and stone and lay them. 8x8x16 concrete block is only 1.25$ It takes me and another mason a month to build foundation and 160 feet of 8 foot basement wall. Looks like I will spend around 33,000 all together. 17,749$ so far for 10 acres, hand driven 2" well, ram pump, and gas. Icf and poured walls can be used to make earthships too. I am trying for r 35+ in walls and r 60 in roof. Windows and septic will be must expensive part. Above ground planter because seems easier. 6/12 mono sloped roof going from 6 feet to 18. I loose window space due to thick masonry walls but should give room for 14 foot tall plants going 2 stories of windows. Shape and size of windows effects price. 135$ for angle iron if using rectangular window per window. Arched windows cost more too. 17 windows plus 4 egres windows. Buying windows for an earthship is like buying sails for a sailboat the more education on subject I can get the better. The way most houses are built they are meant to cost you money every month.

    • @philipvecchio3292
      @philipvecchio3292 2 года назад +5

      Probably most of the concepts could be built with Insulated Concrete Forms. Even trying to reduce embodied energy and recycling by using things like ground up tires as agregate, this requires a lot less work and is conventional enough to get past building codes.
      The South Facing windows and Thermal Mass is good as well.
      If the Water is incorporated, water has 4 times as much thermal storage as concrete. Putting a cistern in the building could be a better long term heat storage.
      Building into the ground is also an excellent idea.

    • @thesilentone4024
      @thesilentone4024 2 года назад +1

      Ya what about Lava rocks they hold heat and dispatch it just as fast for there full of air and gases would make more sense in cooler places.
      So in summer to keep the heat off why don't they have the water go through the walls 1 to cool it for hot places 2 to heat up the water for other uses and or stores it for night time use as well

  • @MatthewByrd
    @MatthewByrd 2 года назад +353

    The tires are NOT packed with soil as soil contains organic material that rots. They're compacted with subsoil which is inorganic and never rots/shrinks. Great video though Matt! Glad you took this subject on

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  2 года назад +92

      Good call out.

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад +5

      Yes, well said for the uneducated, in the ways of Earthships !

    • @cyberwarlord7363
      @cyberwarlord7363 2 года назад +4

      I was looking for this comment.

    • @ilkarusei
      @ilkarusei 2 года назад +9

      Isn't tires release a hazardous substances under sun?

    • @olsim1730
      @olsim1730 2 года назад +7

      @@ilkarusei yes..that's why they're sealed with plaster.

  • @liamsnow03
    @liamsnow03 2 года назад +256

    Even if you're not building an Earthship, using some of the concepts seems really beneficial.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL 2 года назад +15

      I think the idea of reusing grey water for a garden is a great idea, although I'd probably opt for geothermal heating.

    • @skaltura
      @skaltura 2 года назад +8

      I like the concept of the "terrace" where plants can grow, all autonomous and working off waste water etc.
      I'm not a green thumb, but do enjoy a nice terrace to spend time in with some plants in it. Humans are just wired that way

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL 2 года назад +6

      @@skaltura I agree using some of these technologies to give an atmosphere to your house looks awesome.

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT 2 года назад +4

      ​@@KRYMauL And the blackwater leech fields can serve as food for animals like chicken and rabbits which to create manure for the plants which use greywater to grow food. But I do think they should add more greenhouse area to the passive houses, as well as maybe build the whole house inside a greenhouse or build a greenhouse around a house, to make it more energy efficient in colder areas, as many have done, and even to use concentrated solar (solar troughs or simply mirrors reflecting more light onto the house) to help even more with that.
      If there is plenty of space, even using fresnel-mirror walls to concentrate sunlight from a distance, would help a lot. The normal walls could have angled mirrors added to to reflect sunlight onto the house, and in far northern areas, it is possible to build 4-story-tall fresnel mirror walls, through which wind can blow, to reflect more sunlight onto houses or even greenhouses, allowing even places in the arctic circle to grow raspberries and wheat and corn. And it would also have minimal impact on the climate, since the light you concentrate on the greenhouses will be obtained by shading the place behind the fresnel mirror walls, as opposed to bringing external heat to the place. This would make the shaded areas better for freeze-drying produce, too, or to stockpile snow and ice for later use, in dry cold places. And it would make a lot of the previously uninhabitable places habitable.
      The same technology behind solar power plants which use concentrated solar, can be used to get solar heat and sunlight into well insulated places in the arctic, for example. If you only get a few months of heat per year, why not store it in the ground, by first insulating the ground well enough to not lose that heat non-intentionally. You can have very long soilcrete/dirtcrete fields with hollow thin tunnels running through them, and use hot air or that expensive liquid they use in solar troughs, to heat the cement to 300 degrees celsius, or use sand instead of soilcrete/dirtcrete and use bigger pipes, since air can go through the gaps in the sand, and heat the sand at 500 degrees celsius with hot air. You can then use that heat to generate power (through steam turbines), or to heat the place to more comfortable levels. And the orientation of the mirrors would not need to be changed nearly as often.
      If you want to go the extra step, you can even use hot air balloons to hold mirrors at a height of a kilometer or two above the ground, to get sunlight onto a settlement or farm when the ground itself gets no sunlight, and you can even use ground-based mirrors to move sunlight to places where it's needed. For example, you could use the same system of tethered hot air balloons holding mirrors to get sunlight from mirrors placed above the ground into the sea at a large distance, effectively cooling hot arid places like Sahara enough for water to not be lost immediately to the solar infrared radiation, use that water to grow plants, and use that heat to evaporate more water which to get onto the hot dry lands.
      At that scale, you could even use the concept of solar towers or solar chimneys, but turning them into solar pipes or solar tunnels instead, by getting seawater from far away from the coast, placing it into long greenhouses with concentrated solar evaporating water and then superheating steam, then funnel it into kilometers-long pipes, then use some of that high-pressure steam released it towards the sky in a hundred-meters (hundred-yards) tunnel, which would create updraft from the ground, which could be used to cool down the rest of the steam into drinking water, and part of energy of the updraft can be used by a ground-based vertical-axis wind turbine, to generate power, and store the water in heavily shaded areas, ideally walled-in areas, with limited circulation and insulation from the heat. Now that you can have water in very hot very dry areas, terraforming those places for high-density human habitation would not be difficult.

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT 2 года назад +1

      @@skaltura Check my other replies to this thread. I don't want to repeat myself, and copying the message would shadow-ban the comments.

  • @briankumpan9892
    @briankumpan9892 2 года назад +24

    There is a male nurse here in Amarillo who did build his house out of old tires. He would work his shift, come home and change, go get the tire or tires he needed and go to the site and start packing the tires full of dirt and then stack them accordingly. He would do so many and then go back to the apartment and get some rest before his next shift and this went on for 2 years I think. He also built it into a hill to get the radiant energy off the dirt that surrounds 3 sides of his house. He has rain gutters that feed into a black tank with 4 kinds of water filters that make the water so clean he drinks it every day. The gutter system at the lowest point has a, what I call, a junk tube for like sticks and leaves can go to so it does not go into the water tank. The land is paid off and he basically lives rent free. He has 2 solar panels (then, some years back when I went there) and 1 battery, he does not leave things plugged in, if he needs to use them, then he plugs them in and when done unplugs the devices. He has a compost toilet and the house sits at a slight angle to catch the early morning sun in the winter to help heat the house and an overhang on the roof to keep the heat out in the summer. No propane, just an electric house

  • @inannaasherah
    @inannaasherah 11 месяцев назад +2

    As someone who has lived & helped build Earthship’s there are far more pros than cons. Living in one creates a very harmonious relationship with one’s self & the earth. It is a way of life. But beyond it all it goes back to balance your are reducing waste & consumption. Those two factors alone is what has caused so many issues in our environment world wide. Mike is one of the most incredible human beings I have ever met in my life. I’m so proud of what he’s done.

  • @TealCheetah
    @TealCheetah 2 года назад +77

    I pet sat at an earthship-ish house and loved it! The house was recessed into a hill, with the southern facing windows. Both summer and winter, whatever they made the walls and ceiling with, kept things comfortably cool. The interior was a modern home with high, curved ceilings. Years later I still think about this house and I would love to live in something similar!

  • @gearslingger
    @gearslingger 2 года назад +32

    My buddy owns one out in Utah. I’ll actually be staying there again next month and have enjoyed my past trips there in the past. He has a lemon tree inside and never runs the heat!

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад +1

      Fantastic, and aren't you lucky.! Must be very efficient; well aspected, I guess.

    • @Eyes0penNoFear
      @Eyes0penNoFear 2 года назад

      I live in Utah as well. Is he in southern Utah, or a part of the state that gets colder in the winter?

    • @gearslingger
      @gearslingger 2 года назад +1

      @@Eyes0penNoFear we were snowmobiling out the back door so definitely cold.
      It's in a desert but near elevation.

  • @ExcelsiorTech
    @ExcelsiorTech 2 года назад +2

    My mother made an Earthship after seeing the PBS special of Dennis Weaver's Earthship in the early '90s. Many hurdles (including fraud from a contractor) made the build take 10 years, but she is in it now and loves it. I helped with packing many of the tires. It does NOT take 45min-1hr to pack one tire. Maybe if you are counting the stucco and finishing, you might say that. With two people, one shoveling in dirt and one packing with a sledge, it takes maybe 5min-10min, maybe a bit more. It's been a lifetime ago when I did it so I could be wrong :-). We had a DIY-made pounder, a metal fence pole stuck in a flower pot that was then filled with cement. While filling and pounding the tire with the sledge around the edges, you used the bigger pounder to pack the middle and finish. It's extremely labor-intensive. It is an excellent workout if you are in shape (or want to get in shape). Also, off-gassing has always been a talking point, but my mom has had it tested (a few times I think) and there has never been a problem.
    My mom could not afford to make this completely off-grid with solar panels and whatnot, so it is mainly a seriously efficient house with HVAC and a gas fireplace. My mom is a cowgirl, and she loves the ruggedness of the home as well as the efficiency. Also, she is an artist, and as you can see in the video (linked below) there is a lot of room to make the design your own with this kind of house. Also, being in Florida means there is a ton of humidity, and the HVAC helps mitigate that.
    This video is when she had it mostly finished about 14yrs ago. Near the end of the video, you can see where it is not quite finished yet, and there are exposed tire walls. That is all finished now. I seriously love the concepts, but I would probably build one so modified (I live in UT) that it would not be considered Earthship anymore.
    Here is the video I made eons ago when my mom finished the main part, and we visited for Christmas.
    vimeo.com/6238648

  • @AnimalFacts
    @AnimalFacts 2 года назад +371

    An amazingly well-balanced look at Earthships. They are awesome, but as you point out, not perfect or for everywhere/everyone.

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  2 года назад +29

      Thanks for watching! Appreciate it.

    • @charlesrichard7715
      @charlesrichard7715 2 года назад +7

      Hey wait a minute, this isn't an animal fact!

    • @PashaGamingYT
      @PashaGamingYT 2 года назад +3

      @@charlesrichard7715
      We should burn them

    • @ghazman6141
      @ghazman6141 2 года назад +3

      I just wonder if those used tires emit VOC's. It is a great use for them if they do not.

    • @kaymish6178
      @kaymish6178 2 года назад +3

      @@ghazman6141 in the video it says that the tires emit toxic chemicals as they break down in the sun.

  • @TheJociman
    @TheJociman 2 года назад +42

    I wish in future we will see a lot more:
    Systems managing toilet water locally, turning it into usable fertilizer. Basically mini water treatment plant.
    Secondary water system re-using grey water (for toilet flushing mostly).
    Highly automated indoor gardens.
    Geothermal heating / energy.
    "Undecided with Matt Ferrell" episodes.

    • @DarkMoonDroid
      @DarkMoonDroid 2 года назад +2

      @Destiny Karst
      I think we should be composting our solid waste as well.
      We currently flush clean drinking water down our toilets.
      That is completely insane and unnecessary.
      And if we all had a biogas generator along side of our HVAC and water heaters and etc. we would be making our own fuel as well.
      It's possible to make units that will do this cleanly and safely.
      Instead I remember reading somewhere about how they want us to start drinking our processed black-water.
      It's amazing to me that this is even worth considering over processing our own solid waste.

    • @vanderumd11
      @vanderumd11 2 года назад

      @Destiny Karst california needs heavy desalination plants for their water to refill areas.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 2 года назад +2

      @@vanderumd11 there’s also the option of reprocessing sewage into drinking-grade water, it was being trialled in Singapore a while ago, apparently tasted like basically nothing bc it was more or less distilled water. But I haven’t kept up with it so I don’t know if that programme is a success or if other nations are considering it or what.

    • @trapjohnson
      @trapjohnson 2 года назад +1

      Now obtain all of these in highly dense Urban environments.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 2 года назад +1

      The first part isn't too far off from what most septic tanks do(they are also really easy to adapt into a methane digestor)

  • @casperunnerup
    @casperunnerup 2 года назад +16

    I'm thinking about building a traditional home, but with an attached large conservatory/greenhouse.
    Insulating the foundation and have a huge well insulated thermal mass to force air from the conservatory in through to heat it up.
    Adding cooling tubes in the ground like the earthship for a cold thermal mass.
    Then use these thermal masses to pre-heat/cool the air and mix it with outside air going to the heat recovery system of the house. Hopefully removing the need for air conditioning in the summer and helping heating up the house in the winter months.
    This has the added benefit of extending the months of the year you can be outside. A great party space, since weather isn't an issue and probably the most important part. Since I'm ginger it would be nice to not worry as much about sunscreen all the time, because of the UV protection glass can provide

  • @linmal2242
    @linmal2242 2 года назад +9

    Been a key follower of Earthships and the Permaculture movements since their advent in the 1970's. Never had the chooch to do one myself though. Need lots of youth, energy, and commitment!

  • @MysterySemicolon
    @MysterySemicolon 2 года назад +25

    Just as an FYI for the Kinney earthship it was built in an area of the province that sees the largest percentage of sunlight in Canada, is one of the windiest areas and affected by Chinooks all winter giving it a very mild winter climate most years to operate in compared to the northern end of the province.
    I think having a solar/wind driven pump and geothermal heating/cooling system would be a far better option for most of the prairies than just relying on passive heating and cooling like the earthship does. A dehumidifier in an underground home can also outlet to the grey water system, preventing mould and providing a bit more water.

  • @baosia
    @baosia 2 года назад +79

    I've always felt a bit iffy about the tires in the walls ever since I learnt what an eartship was. For a community so focused on healthy living I've always thought of that as a glaring flaw... but their impact on sustainable living has been notable, even though the inner circle is a little bit too hardcore for the most of us. I look at the earthship community a bit like pioneers that pushes the boundaries so others can follow in a safe manner

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад +11

      What is your beef with the tyres? They are inert and when consolidated into a wall with earth and render, will stay there as long as the house lasts, giving no outgassing (like stone kitchen benchtops do) and providing thermal mass !

    • @ckafam
      @ckafam 2 года назад +30

      I have a pile of 200 neatly stacked tires on my property awaiting collection for recycling. I walk past the tires daily and there is only one way to describe them. They stink! The outgassing, at least for exposed tires, is awful. If they are sealed from the living space then fine. Otherwise your home will constantly smell of rubber.

    • @baosia
      @baosia 2 года назад +3

      I get that they perform some kind of function, and used tires are an abundance in the united states, so it's cheap and provides structure... But it really goes against all my core beliefs to bury rubber like that... I don't know... It just feels wrong

    • @DarkMoonDroid
      @DarkMoonDroid 2 года назад +11

      The question is not _whether or not_ to use the tires.
      The question is _how_ to use them.
      Humanity has to figure out what to do with all those tires! Finding a solution is part of this project! If they off-gas, then figure out how to prevent it from seeping into the house. If this problem doesn't pique your curiosity, then I don't think you understand what this technique is about.
      Watch the Documentary "Garbage Warrior".

    • @vanderumd11
      @vanderumd11 2 года назад +14

      @@ckafam yes if they are buried you wouldn’t smell them. The sun breaks them down faster

  • @CaptainKirk01
    @CaptainKirk01 2 года назад +4

    I was aware of the Earthship concept back in the 70's-and '80s when I was old enough my parents started taking us on vacations. We looked at many mostly out west in Nevada, Utah, California areas. My father ended up building an underground house. It was under 6 to 8feet of dirt that kept the house at 55F year-round. at almost 6800sq ft it was incredibly easy to heat. You only had to raise the temp about 15 degrees in the winter, even if it was below zero out. and summer it was natural air conditioning. We brought warm outside air in to bring up the temperature in the summer.

    • @DarkMoonDroid
      @DarkMoonDroid 2 года назад

      Awesome!

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 2 года назад

      The hobbits had the right idea, it seems.

    • @CaptainKirk01
      @CaptainKirk01 2 года назад

      @@kaitlyn__L Yes I did like the Hobbit houses. I saw an eathship as it was called back in the 80's that was built out of inflated balloons and sprayed with a structural cement or something, and the house was a bunch of bubbles connecteted together. I did like the round hobit door.

  • @The2xWhiskey
    @The2xWhiskey 2 года назад +2

    9:26 - Used tires are utilized in the thermal-mass walls. By this stage they have done all the outgassing they are going to do and are basically inert.

  • @DSesignD
    @DSesignD 2 года назад +2

    I've visited and spent nights in them, in winter no less! It's fun to sip your coffee next to a banana tree (in perfect comfort) and look outside at the cold desert landscape. You show the early "showy" earthships here in the video, and they're not for everyone, but they are legit and they've gone through a lot of evolution - the newer ones really don't have that "wild hippy" look. The plans are there for more conventional integrations - actually, I think it would be AWESOME if you interviewed Mr. Reynolds. He's quite a character.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL 2 года назад

      I think if you add a greenhouse to a passive home you'd actually have a very nice home.

  • @steveasher9239
    @steveasher9239 2 года назад +4

    I LITERALLY lived down the road from the earthship community outside Taos. And had friends who were self building an earth ship there. Reynolds got mad at them because they wouldn't angle their front glass wall as is the nearly iconic look of an earth ship. They can get too hot angled as they are, sometimes even in the winter. Affecting not only comfort but possibly plant growth.
    Many of the other homes have sun shades on their front glass walls for that reason. So siting and these eventual issues definitely can be critical.
    My friends eventually finished the home and it was beautiful and functional.

  • @errolplata45
    @errolplata45 2 года назад +6

    Net zero Passive Houses can be built with Modular systems such as Build Smart for market rate or less.
    As you noted in your video Earthships can have issues with comfort.
    Add principles of grey water, and plants in the home for the Passive House, I think is the best of both worlds.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL 2 года назад

      I think that's the only thing that these things have going for them. I honestly would love to have a garden in attached to my house, and maybe it could include a pond with some fish.

  • @justincase5272
    @justincase5272 Год назад

    A good friend has an Earthship home. Totally off-grid. I've stayed there overnight. Extremely comfortable. He built his and his wife's 3 BR, 2 BA berm home for $17,000 in 2006. He had an abundance of solar pv, so after adding a few more batteries to his battery bank, and switching to LED lighting, he swapped out his propane range/oven and dryer for electric ones, and found he still had plenty of power to spare. After replacing his gas hot water with electric, he STILL had enough power to spare, so these days, his last 500 gallon load of propane is down to 430 gallons over more than a decade, primary feeding his outdoor grill and fire pit. He says he'll be dead before exhausting it.

  • @justangvano
    @justangvano 2 года назад +1

    Awesome video! I've been following this method of building for over ten years and I think it is a fantastic idea. One thing you did not mention in the video is that you need a certain type of soil to compact into the tires, one that is more sandy then loamy.
    I live in Manitoba, Canada, one of the most extreme climates on the planet. On one of the coldest winters on record in one hundred years (-50C), I visited an earth ship and the family told me that the internal temperature never dropped below 10C with no heat source. The owner told me they would just bake potatoes in the morning for breakfast to heat up the house. I think it was about 1200sq ft.
    Thanks for all the awesome content!

  • @gardencompost259
    @gardencompost259 2 года назад +3

    My wife and I toured an earthship in the Taos community mentioned. And I got to visit one in Colorado built for Denis Weaver, a couple of decades ago. I was impressed by the technique, and performance. What was noted was the involvement in maintaining the systems, water, food, heating/ cooling, as in opening / closing windows, and valves, etc. so this makes for difficulties for some people that are not used to such things. Personally I love the idea, as I’ve actually lived in an off grid home in the Colorado mountains. This lifestyle is not for everyone, and should be entered with knowledge of sustainability.
    Imho earth ships are for adventurous, knowledgeable, physically able people that can enjoy out of the ordinary lifestyle.

    • @babaluto
      @babaluto 2 года назад

      I visited there as well. It was when Dennis had moved out of the house due to what they thought was the tires out gassing. I did notice a petroleum smell but not too bad. Did you notice anything like that?

  • @sancochito75
    @sancochito75 2 года назад +8

    I like the water distribution aspect as well as the energy saving of an earth ship. Hopefully this can be adapted to a more common use in the future..

    • @adamkrasneski3679
      @adamkrasneski3679 2 года назад

      For real. There was a high school student in cali that won some kind of reward for coming up with a system eere homeowners can reuse washing machine grey eater for gardening. Cant wait to own a home someday and apply the practice.

  • @HavaWM
    @HavaWM 3 дня назад

    Re: the outgassing of the tires, two things:
    1) You’re building with used tires. Most of the outgassing that’s going to happen has already happened by time you’re building with them
    2) You seal the tires (on both sides of the wall) to keep oxygen and sunlight out. Any offgassing that could potentially still happen doesn’t, bc the gasses are trapped inside the sealant
    HTH!

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 2 года назад

    In the evolution of farmlife from on-the-land existence for most people, to small farms, hobby farms and backyard gardens, then come greenhouses and now all-combined Earthships. It's lifestyle satisfaction, and if the advice to financial investors is, "don't risk more than you are willing to lose", so it always is too, for working and living, don't go beyond with what you know or can find out.
    Which is why this research is valuable, thank you.

  • @jagadishgospat2548
    @jagadishgospat2548 2 года назад +17

    Better to implement the best features of earth ship into modern houses and reduce consumption and increasing efficiency in every aspect of a house.

  • @JustinDeRosa
    @JustinDeRosa 2 года назад +18

    Love your content. This is a perfect cross-over opportunity for you and a bunch of my favorite RUclipsrs... Kirsten and her family at FairConpanies and Dave at Just Have A Think. Keep up the excellent work!

    • @y0nd3r
      @y0nd3r 2 года назад +1

      Both of those are great channels. I wouldn't put this one up that high though. He has gained celebrity status because of his well researched subjects, but the continual laughing at his own lame jokes is pretty terrible.

  • @davestagner
    @davestagner Год назад +1

    Speaking of water… most of the Earthships in the colony near Taos are self-sufficient for water, or nearly so. The Taos mesa only gets seven inches of rainfall a year (it’s a proper desert). So they can be made extremely efficient!

  • @de-CO2
    @de-CO2 2 года назад +2

    Topical, thank you! One point of contention: dig deep enough and the soil is always a nice (relatively) warm temperature. It's not always practical, but it's always an option, even in Canada.

  • @cavemaneca
    @cavemaneca 2 года назад +39

    There's a lot of good ideas that going into building these which are essentially niche artistic endeavors. They absolutely will not be a good standard for most homes, but are a good inspiration and test bench for more efficient homes. Hopefully we'll see a lot more ideas like this in the future, where the goal is to use as little energy as possible to keep a home comfortable and safe.

    • @theyredistortingyourrhthym126
      @theyredistortingyourrhthym126 2 года назад +2

      agenda 2030

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад

      @@theyredistortingyourrhthym126 Whatever that means!!!

    • @DarkMoonDroid
      @DarkMoonDroid 2 года назад

      @ThatGuy Makes Things
      That is not the goal for Earthships.
      A huge part of Earthships is to intentionally _use garbage_ as building materials! Esp. garbage that is one of humanity's worst waste problems. If this isn't interesting for the builder/owner, I would steer clear.

    • @cavemaneca
      @cavemaneca 2 года назад +1

      @@DarkMoonDroid the idea is obviously a hyper focus on sustainability, prominently using both recycled materials and renewable energy. I have a few major concerns though.
      Are the materials being used really the best use case for recycling that material? In one shot it looks like they're using aluminium cans, which should honestly just be reprocessed. Every gram of aluminium able to be reprocessed is one less gram that needs to be mined.
      Does the energy cost of this construction method offset it's use of recycled materials? If a lot more energy goes into making these houses, and/or more energy is used maintaining them (as there was some concerns addressed re: degradation in the video) then it would be more sustainable to just use new materials with a lower energy cost and longer lifespan. Worth noting that logging can be done sustainably and can technically be a carbon capture method if the supply chain uses renewable electricity.

    • @crackedemerald4930
      @crackedemerald4930 2 года назад

      @@cavemaneca concrete takes a lot of energy and releases a ton of CO2 to make, so any house that has it has a disadvantage to begin with.
      And yea, glass and aluminium can be recycled to oblivion, but at least the bottles supply light, like a window would do, and doesn't need to be made.

  • @benrawner5218
    @benrawner5218 2 года назад +3

    Thanks for going over these. Earth ships are super niche and I never thought it would get any coverage. I like how you go over both the pros and the cons.

  • @sixgunmiller6198
    @sixgunmiller6198 2 года назад

    I supplied the first off grid system for a rammed earth home in Arkansas in 1998. Built from the ground up by an engineer from Texas. Out standing structure. Entire home runs off 1-150 watt solar panel 1- 450 watt wind generator and 8 trojan 105's. Wood heat, generator for ac only which they rarely need to use. Water capture he also designed was 8,000 gallons and the left over fed his pond at the bottom of the hill

  • @ExarchiasGhost
    @ExarchiasGhost 2 года назад +2

    I can imagine earthships being suitable as buffer zones for the deserted areas that are planned for reforestation. The houses can be benefited of the dry climate, the around areas could spare repurposed materials and the people that live there will be very motivated to contribute on the preservation and the expansion of the vegetation. Water and electric infrastructure is probably necessary but this is usually the case for an arrea that needs to be reforested, (at least will be someone there to take of the infrastructure).

    • @midnight8341
      @midnight8341 2 года назад +2

      That is actually a great idea. Building those earthships along the Sahara dessert would provide a place to not only dispose of a lot of junk like tires in a useful and mostly harmless way for the next decades, but would also provide housing and security for the people who have to leave there because of deforestation... I just don't know if we can restore the land fast enough so that they don't have to relocate nontheless.

    • @ExarchiasGhost
      @ExarchiasGhost 2 года назад +2

      @@midnight8341 Actually I was talking about reforestation, (but your concept applies here as well), when people are returning to a deserted land to try their luck again, with reforestation as a tool to return the vegetation in the area.
      I believe that we are talking for the same thing but in different concepts that are both useful to the society and the local vegetation. :)

  • @AssanRaelian
    @AssanRaelian 2 года назад +20

    Excellent video. I’m a student of the “Earthship Biotechture Academy” In Teos NM. It’s my hope to one day soon ; to bring this technology to Côté d’Ivoire Africa. I’m told that there’s a family group trying to grant me land to begin this important project.🖐🏿

    • @Sagittarius-A-Star
      @Sagittarius-A-Star 2 года назад +1

      Good luck!
      20 years ago I could not go to work in your country because it was considered too dangerous.

    • @AssanRaelian
      @AssanRaelian 2 года назад +1

      @@Sagittarius-A-Star I’ve relocated from the USA in 2017 & I can see where the “Earthship inspired technology” Can help improve living conditions in the villages. If you would like to view some of my journey? Search Expat to Côté d’Ivoire Back To Kama.🖐🏿

    • @brokkoliomg6103
      @brokkoliomg6103 2 года назад +2

      I was thinking to go to the academy too at some point. Can you recommend it? I would like to build an Earthship in Europe one day. Are there other Europeans, and what is the sentiment for building there?
      Would love to hear your insights on these things! Thanks!

    • @AssanRaelian
      @AssanRaelian 2 года назад +2

      @@brokkoliomg6103 Hello & yes I highly recommend that you apply to the Earthship Academy. I further recommend that you purchase the books that you’ll need for personal reference. There’s a healthy diversity of people whom attend the Academy. You’ll feel right at home there. If you would like to view some of my journey? Search Expat to Côté d’Ivoire Back To Kama 🖐🏿 All the best to you 😃👍🏿🛸

    • @brokkoliomg6103
      @brokkoliomg6103 2 года назад +2

      @@AssanRaelian Thanks I will check it out.
      And how long does it take to complete the academy? Is it like a degree, three years or so? Or just like one year?

  • @andreweverett
    @andreweverett 2 года назад +4

    Another top notch production. I think I am still tending toward the desire to build Passive, but I wonder if I can implement some of the water reuse/harvesting functionality of an Earthship...

  • @simonholley4110
    @simonholley4110 2 года назад

    I have seen the earthship in Burntisland, Scotland. It is a demonstration of concept rather than a full house, but really fascinating, as the Scottish climate is much greyer and wetter than New Mexico. They adapted the ideas to match, for example the window surfaces are vertical not sloped to cope with the lower sunlight level. They also have the advantage of building in the site of an old watermill, and so converted the millrace into a mini hydroelectrc scheme.

  • @oldskooljules
    @oldskooljules 2 года назад +1

    There is an excellent community around the building of earthships, with many being built by people who come to learn from experts, so all you need to do is feed and house for the time they live onsite. Not for everyone, for sure, but still mitigates the cost involved.
    As far as the off-gassing of tires, much of the issue involved in the breakdown of tires is in its exposure to sunlight and oxygen, both of which are essentially solved in the construction process. For those still on the fence, rammed earth walls are a viable alternative, and don't require the application of cob on the inside surface, though a waterproof membrane on the side that faces out toward the earthen berm may be necessary.

  • @grizzlyadams7127
    @grizzlyadams7127 2 года назад +8

    I'm super interested in using alternative building materials to build a more energy efficient home. Could you do a video on some of the different types on the market today?

  • @brickbunny9686
    @brickbunny9686 2 года назад +38

    Has anyone attempted to make an Earthship Apartment complex as a way to expand the Earthship idea in a way that could potentially reduce the construction cost via large scale development?

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  2 года назад +13

      Haven't come across anything. If anyone knows, drop a comment!

    • @vroomfondel5447
      @vroomfondel5447 2 года назад +12

      I think the main advantages come from all the added mass. That’s not really compatible when you are building more than one story.

    • @koborkutya7338
      @koborkutya7338 2 года назад +8

      this is a good point, could make it feasible in the sense that you could cover several residences with single systems (like greywater). Every residence having their own system is appealing to individualists (like myself) but could be a big hassle for many. 4-6 apartments running on 1 system is less burden for each.

    • @KerbalFacile
      @KerbalFacile 2 года назад +1

      That would make it more into an arcology, than an apartment complex.

    • @brokkoliomg6103
      @brokkoliomg6103 2 года назад +6

      I think they're building a school in Haiti or somewhere, which looks different, and more large scale if you will. Dont know if it fits your demands though.

  • @scottbillups4576
    @scottbillups4576 2 года назад

    Hi Matt, I also live in Wester, Ma. I love Earthships, and I looked-in to building one 3-years ago. All of the challenges you listed are exactly what stopped me from building one.
    Instead, I built a tiny-house, traditional building techniques, but SUPER energy efficient.

  • @garethbaus5471
    @garethbaus5471 2 года назад +1

    If you could afford to build one earth ships seem to be about perfect for most of rural Kansas, it gets just enough water that it isn't considered to be a dessert, but water is still a scarce resource that needs to be maximized, you are likely to be far enough from your neighbors that utilities can be cost prohibitive, the average temperature is comfortable so the ground temperature will be pleasent, and earthquakes are pretty much not an issue which means you don't need to modify the design to be earthquake tolerant.

  • @Souchirouu
    @Souchirouu 2 года назад +103

    Imagine actually living in a timeline where I could afford buying a home, let alone building one myself.

    • @KhaalixD
      @KhaalixD 2 года назад +10

      just wait a couple of years for supply to catch up after Covid and stop only looking for a home in major costline cities and you wont have a problem.

    • @bugfeatures
      @bugfeatures 2 года назад +4

      depending on where you live. Building can be cheaper. Most of the materials are upcycled and free. The Land would be the most expansive part. But if you life in places like germany its impossible, because of regulations.

    • @slartibartfast7921
      @slartibartfast7921 2 года назад

      #crypto

    • @DrBernon
      @DrBernon 2 года назад +9

      That would be a timeline without stupid building codes. Blame your politicians.

    • @midnight8341
      @midnight8341 2 года назад +7

      @@DrBernon I mean, some of these building codes are pretty stupid, but others are just to keep the average Joe safe. Like he said in the video, decomposing tires can release toxic fumes into the interior and moisture in the walls can make them brittle and cause mold to grow, whose spores can degrade your lungs if inhaled for a long period of time (like inside a home). There are soo many problems and dangers when building a house that no layman can just do it with junk without creating serious health risks.
      My brother is a master carpenter and he build his house basically himself with excavation, walls, floors and roof all done himself. But for everything else, like plumbing, heating, electrical wiring, windows, etc. he still had experts come to do it, because a) he wasn't allowed to do it and thus his house wouldn't have been insured otherwise and b) he knew it would just cause problems down the line if he tried to do it himself and since he's gonna pay for that house for the next 25-35 years, he's not gonna take any risks.

  • @ApotheosisStone
    @ApotheosisStone 2 года назад +13

    I've been interested in the idea of 3d printed earthships for a while. Since the main component seems to be soil and they are often half-buried it seems like it might be possible to have a vehicle sized 3d printing robot excavate an area to build a sewage system/ garden section and compact the adjacent area into a foundation. Use the remaining rock/clay/sand/plant materials to make a earthen mix that can be extruded out of a long arm printing head to build up walls and even the basic structure of the roof and water collection system. While it is building you could either have a wagon with the other supplies and a second robotic arm or a small group of construction workers placing things like plumbing, electrical, doors, and windows in as the robot prints around them. The tires, cans, and bottles seem kind of unnecessary and mostly decorative. Maybe a time-lapse camera and some other climate measuring equipment could be placed on the lot a year in advance to determine the best design for the home though it would be best to develop a few base models that allow the home owners a good amount of leeway in adjusting for changing climates. Probably tropic, desert, plains, mountain, and tundra that way the program can start with the basic design and tweak the angle of windows, thickness of walls, and a few other variables to fit the more precise location.

    • @vanderumd11
      @vanderumd11 2 года назад

      We want the cans, tires and things to be used to keep them from just taking space in the dumps.

    • @ApotheosisStone
      @ApotheosisStone 2 года назад

      @@vanderumd11 Isn't encasing them in the dirt of an earthship pretty much the same thing as burring them in a landfill?

    • @vanderumd11
      @vanderumd11 2 года назад

      @@ApotheosisStone it’s about use of space. The point is you want the thermal mass in an earth ship. Filling random objects into a hole in the ground is wasting valued space. Plus we have to ship this stuff overseas a lot of the times

    • @klincecum
      @klincecum 2 года назад

      @@vanderumd11 Adding cans and bottles adds insulation, not thermal mass.

  • @BUCURPOPA
    @BUCURPOPA 2 года назад +2

    Hi Matt!
    Love your videos!
    After studying houses for the purpose of building one myself, I found 2 concepts that I love.
    1) The straw bale house
    2) I call it the northern house, this being a home built in the arctic circle and is basically a giant greenhouse with a family mudhouse/ cobb house built in the middle.
    Both designs are cheap and efficient.
    I would love to see a presentation made by you on these subjects!

  • @chriscutress1702
    @chriscutress1702 2 года назад +1

    I remember years ago seeing a documentary on a home built with tires by Dennis Weaver the television actor (McCloud and Gunsmoke). He seemed ahead of the wave with the techniques and technologies that he was using to negate his carbon footprint before anyone even talked about their carbon footprints.

  • @KentHambrock
    @KentHambrock 2 года назад +6

    I hope someday to build and live in something like an earthship, though heavily modified for the Appalachian mountains.

    • @DarkMoonDroid
      @DarkMoonDroid 2 года назад

      I hope you get to develop that some day and show us how it's done!
      👏👏👏👏👏🙌

  • @enox3547
    @enox3547 2 года назад +3

    The water system is the most interesting part. Rather than in a home can we implement grey water use in a city?

    • @Alessandro-yn3ly
      @Alessandro-yn3ly 2 года назад

      we do not separare greywater from blackwater sadly (where I live at least). But you can use washing hands water to flush, it is very cheap and simple solution.

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  2 года назад +1

      It's definitely possible, but depends on what local requirements are. In the US it varies state by state. pioneerwatertanksamerica.com/is-it-illegal-to-collect-rainwater-in-your-state/

  • @jakehermann2403
    @jakehermann2403 2 года назад

    I just discovered this channel. I've seen 2 videos so far and I can tell that I am going to get hooked on this content. My impression so far is that these videos are very informative, entertaining, well thought out, and well researched. I believe you are promoting a very positive cause in a world that needs it. Thank you for what you do, friend.

  • @fernandoreynoso2496
    @fernandoreynoso2496 2 года назад

    I think the water treatment to use it again... that should be a must in every home... Here (in Argentina) we use drinkable water to take a bath, to wash the dishes, to fill a pool, to flush the toilet... to everything... That was the thing that draw most of my attention in the video. Thanx for the good content as always!!!

  • @danielsherman2969
    @danielsherman2969 2 года назад +5

    Interesting breakdown of the elements of the Earthships, an interesting review!
    Earthships seems like a good way just not right to most of the population
    Yet, I think that most of the elements should be implemented in modern living , especially in urban building.
    Passive building principles for living buildings is possible by using the right materials and planning.
    While the rest of the elements - water recycling, sewage treatment, and even small energy generation and storage should be regional infrastructure and maybe even using our sewage to control more of the cooling of the city.
    Food production -well at least some of the vegetables can be grown and sold inside each neighborhoods minimizing transportation of goods and by that carbon foot print as those technologies already exits(local production)

    • @leeames9063
      @leeames9063 Год назад

      Local Neighborhood Farm Co-ops.
      Goods or services traded for goods or services.
      Like the Amish except with cell phones.

  • @ryanlaabs6034
    @ryanlaabs6034 2 года назад +3

    I want to use tires to build a large wall around my property. I can have it be vertical on the outside and more like a hill on the inside. Using modern compactors, it will take a few minutes, not hours per tire. Add a biodegradable lattice to the outside wall to allow vines to grow and put grass up the hill. Just a thought I had 🤷‍♂️

    • @y0nd3r
      @y0nd3r 2 года назад +1

      Sounds great if you have the room. Don't forget to put some kind of french drain at the bottom to channel the rain water away from the house and the wall.

    • @ryanlaabs6034
      @ryanlaabs6034 2 года назад

      @@y0nd3r I currently have 15 acres, I am trying to acquire an additional 30

    • @y0nd3r
      @y0nd3r 2 года назад

      @@ryanlaabs6034 lucky you. Wish we all had that kind of money.

    • @ryanlaabs6034
      @ryanlaabs6034 2 года назад

      @@y0nd3r I’m not lucky at all

    • @y0nd3r
      @y0nd3r 2 года назад

      @@ryanlaabs6034 okay, I'm sitting over here with zero acres but you're not lucky. Right then. Carry on.

  • @xehaytecle932
    @xehaytecle932 2 года назад +1

    It can be used as the replacement or melting for ceramics,shoes,wind turbine ,chairs,protect wall ,dish handler,p..Ror PVC ,Iron separated from the rabber used for many thing for making bopt and anding teeth to make new tyre

  • @TransparentUtoptia
    @TransparentUtoptia 2 года назад

    Best edu vid for Eartships I have seen, and been following them for 20yrs.

  • @by9917
    @by9917 2 года назад +3

    I converted a relatively new home to net zero and the cost appears to have been less than the numbers given for an Earthship. I live in the middle of the country, and even here, if you are within a city limit it would be a very hard sell to get many of the things show allowed. Net zero is that that hard, and could more easily be done with typical construction. I'm in the process of building a new home, and the plan is for it to also be net zero. This one should be easier since I was able to plan a few things in advance. My location allows me to live without a personal vehicle, but there are many restrictions on the house and even the builder. I like the idea of reused materials, but I'll stick with a location that allows me to ditch a car.

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  2 года назад

      Thanks for sharing!

    • @paul49777
      @paul49777 2 года назад

      B Y,
      Matt talked several times about “Passive Home” PH standards. If you can build or have built a home as close to PH certification, even if you cannot meet the .06 blower door test, you will far exceed Net Zero standards with very little additional expense. Just eliminating thermal bridging in your structure will do wonders in sizing your HVAC requirements, thus saving expenses big time. It’s just not difficult to spend a little time on the structure to greatly improve it’s performance.

  • @nunya___
    @nunya___ 2 года назад +4

    I thought it was cool that in Star Wars Luke's house on Tatooine was underground even-though power seemed easy and cheap.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 2 года назад

      Interestingly those scenes were shot at a hotel, and the building was designed specifically for that purpose.

  • @therepublicofpirates7201
    @therepublicofpirates7201 2 года назад

    i'm just happy you are talking about these houses ABOUT TIME!!!!

  • @LawtonDigital
    @LawtonDigital 2 года назад

    I like the idea of kits. In a kit, one gets the materials and plans (video instruction!) to build and install a particular system: gray water recovery, water collection, solar power collection, battery storage, heat exchangers, water heaters, raised gardens, vertical gardens...
    I also like the idea of "calculators". A calculator can take information you give it about your home, environment, utility bills, and budget and then recommend a kit that comes closest to meeting your needs. For example, a gardening calculator would take into consideration local weather, sun exposure, and space and then recommend kits that will help you best use available time, space, and resources.
    In short, I'd like the knowledge tools that help me make the right choices and the materials and plans to turn those choices into reality - one small project at a time.

  • @michiganengineer8621
    @michiganengineer8621 2 года назад +4

    Some of the Earthship elements that could be added into a new home build would be the super insulation, possibly by being partially underground. Gaining even some heating and cooling passively due to orientation would be a help in many instances as well as solar and/or wind power for even some electrical needs. Gray water recycling definitely makes sense.

  • @Jcewazhere
    @Jcewazhere 2 года назад +9

    Earthships seem like an electric conversion car. Sure they can be great, but they're expensive, usually have big caveats, and take a lot of work. Compared to mass market EVs that are coming on the road now the converts seem quaint, but cool.
    In 150 years we're probably going to look back and cringe that we ever used clean water in our toilets. Assuming we actually survive that long.

    • @billpetersen298
      @billpetersen298 2 года назад

      One of my favourite things. Is watching a clean stream, or river. Doing, what water, was meant to do.

  • @ACoustaDC
    @ACoustaDC 2 года назад

    Great explanation. I too have been fascinated by these homes. I never quite grasped the water reuse process until your video and I feel there is still more to it. Great video as always Matt.

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow448 2 года назад

    I was just thinking about my family homestead in Eastern Washington and how some of these ideas were used in the building of it over 130 years ago. The home had a southern facing sun porch across one side of the home. The northern side of the home was built into the hillside and had a built in root cellar that stayed cool all year long. The entryways to the home all had enclosed porches-airlocks if you want, that reduced the loss of heated or cooled air leaving the house. The vegetable garden was planted within steps of the kitchen for ease of access. And the original kitchen wastewater was piped out to the garden area and allowed to percolate through the soil then into the garden areas. These were all passive ideas to keep the home livable before the days of air conditioning. And saving water was just a standard behavior in arid areas. I am willing to bet that my great grandfather and his family would understand the concepts and ideas used in today’s earthships and support these ideas.

  • @DaveDugdaleColorado
    @DaveDugdaleColorado 2 года назад +85

    That design might need a strong radon mitigation system?

    • @harshalshah4685
      @harshalshah4685 2 года назад +13

      @@HylanderSB the ground

    • @namAehT
      @namAehT 2 года назад +17

      Depends on the area. Around me it would 100% be needed.

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  2 года назад +29

      Good call out.

    • @vroomfondel5447
      @vroomfondel5447 2 года назад +10

      Would it be worse than any other basement?

    • @LilianTheNinkasi
      @LilianTheNinkasi 2 года назад +9

      Radon can be dealt with a good HVAC system, 2 ways, or even maybe create a ventilation that puts the house slightly over pressured, like in nuclear plants, to push the inside air outside, and prevent radon overdose in the air

  • @brianwalsh1844
    @brianwalsh1844 2 года назад

    Excellent videos - really well thought out and produced.

  • @buddhabaggins3925
    @buddhabaggins3925 2 года назад

    There are videos by someone trained in Taos that was working on humidity issues and building in Florida. I've also seen a retired contractor use bails of shredded tires instead of packing with earth to reduce labor requirements.

  • @DeirdreYoung1
    @DeirdreYoung1 2 года назад +3

    Wouldn't tire rubber rot over time? Seems like those walls have a built-in design flaw right there.

    • @iforgotmyrealname4620
      @iforgotmyrealname4620 2 года назад +1

      Good point, I'll go rent out a box house here in the states instead for 600 a month with the walls caving in and the nice deposit of mold behind the tub inside the city where thousands of cars run daily and the pavement spans for hundreds miles. Much healthier for my long term health imo.

    • @iforgotmyrealname4620
      @iforgotmyrealname4620 2 года назад

      @@A_Really_Nice_Guy just like the cigarettes and alcohol being fed to us like candy and advertised like a new toy. Not to be that guy but if I was given the optiong to live in one of these i would take it in a heartbeat.

    • @HavaWM
      @HavaWM 3 дня назад

      To answer your question:
      No. The tires get sealed on both sides and have no exposure to sunlight or oxygen. They’re made from materials not meant to rot away to begin with, and then are sealed up in a tomb with no access to the elements. Earthship homes will outlast all of us, and then some.

  • @theeschatechannel2854
    @theeschatechannel2854 2 года назад +4

    I love this concept but unfortunately, collecting rain water is illegal in many states and counties.

    • @PaleGhost69
      @PaleGhost69 2 года назад +1

      That's outdated. Every state now allows you to collect rainwater. Only 13 states have any restrictions. 19 states allow it with no restrictions and 18 encourage people to harvest it.

    • @namAehT
      @namAehT 2 года назад

      @@PaleGhost69 Plus most of the states with restrictions simply prohibit you from collecting massive amounts in holding ponds or the like.

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  2 года назад +2

      PaleGhost is correct ... it's not illegal, but how much and what you can use it for have requirements around them. Here's a full list for the US: pioneerwatertanksamerica.com/is-it-illegal-to-collect-rainwater-in-your-state/

    • @theeschatechannel2854
      @theeschatechannel2854 2 года назад

      @@UndecidedMF thank you!

  • @toxicbluealtera6909
    @toxicbluealtera6909 2 года назад +2

    stayed in an earthship for a month and it was amazing! spouse and I are planning to build our own in the future.

  • @torempilor
    @torempilor 2 года назад

    Handeeman! One of my fav channels. Great build channel where he has done a tiny house, work shop, rain water harvesting, ICF home. Always look forward to his videos.

  • @christophvonwaldhuf
    @christophvonwaldhuf 2 года назад +3

    Earthships have a few serious problems. The first one is mold.

  • @PaleGhost69
    @PaleGhost69 2 года назад +3

    I have fantasies about joining these guys and turning their desert into an oasis. I love the ideas of earthships but I wish they didn't look like they belong on tatooine.

    • @uramalakia
      @uramalakia 2 года назад +1

      I believe that's part of the appeal.

    • @PaleGhost69
      @PaleGhost69 2 года назад +1

      @@uramalakia Idk I like the cold climate earthship aesthetic better

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  2 года назад

      Some of them really do look like they belong in Star Wars. But it's possible to make them look like pretty much anything you want.

  • @mooneym.3642
    @mooneym.3642 2 года назад

    A proper subsurface basement keeps relatively cool during summers and warm during winters. It does cost more as the structure needs protection from water seepage into the walls, extra power to pump out sewage and the cost of excavation to build it in. However, a subsurface living area can also serve other necessary purposes in times like war.

  • @goober650NX
    @goober650NX 2 года назад

    Excellent overview of the subject. You're definitely switched on ‼👍
    Thanks for making the video and for taking the time to upload.

  • @VechsDavion
    @VechsDavion 2 года назад +21

    Please forgive me if I sound overly cynical here, but these are obviously, as you said, not something everyone can use. In fact, they seem like an artsy-fartsy feel good niche hobby for a tiny population of highly interested enthusiasts. We're not going to save money or practice good environmental stewardship on a country or global scale with these.

    • @demonz9065
      @demonz9065 2 года назад +1

      when did he try to say we would?

    • @ryanzacsanders
      @ryanzacsanders 2 года назад +5

      disagree. They bring a lot of new inputs and widen the horizon of our society on what is important on life and how living sustainably and off grid can work. They raise awareness and society benefits from this awareness in general

    • @koborkutya7338
      @koborkutya7338 2 года назад +7

      many of this we could (and will) turn into a standard (greywater, solar, passive houses). That will (or at least could) have impact globally.

    • @leandersearle5094
      @leandersearle5094 2 года назад +1

      Especially not stewardship, rainwater collection is illegal in some places.

    • @Krankyolman
      @Krankyolman 2 года назад +1

      @@leandersearle5094 really! That seems a bit backwards

  • @SapioiT
    @SapioiT 2 года назад +1

    I think a mixed approach is needed. Take a normal passive house, add a slanted greenhouse or a very large window-wall or set of window walls or sun-rooms and use a dark-colored floor to store heat, and add a lot more insulation on the sides not facing the sun, and maybe use plastic tubes cut in half for landscaping with grey-water and for landscaping plants as leech fields with black water. And all those plants can also be directly ate by animals like chicken or rabbits, whose manure can be used to fertilize the plants intended for human consumption. Also, for very cold places, there are already plenty of cases of houses built inside greenhouses, or houses which had greenhouses build around them, and using concentrated solar (solar troughs, for example, or simply using mirrors to get more sunlight reflected onto the house) can also provide heat and daylight to help with that. Even without mirrors, some greenhouses built in cold regions can make the climate 3 zones warmer, and using concentrated solar heating can probably increase that to 5 zones, at the price of higher costs.

  • @zmavrick
    @zmavrick 2 года назад

    I agree with most of your points. However the 50 inches of rainfall comment I thought missed the concept. It is more needed in a low rainfall region as reuse of the water decreases the overall incoming water requirements. Even if you haul in some of your water there would be a reduction in the amount needed. Remember that there is 0.6 gallon of water per square foot per inch of rain, so a 2000 square foot home would yield 1,200 gallons for every inch of rain. Reuse of grey water would be a big benefit to cities as it would not only reduce the water they need to provide, it also reduces the amount of sewage they have to treat. Rainwater collection also reduces the amount of storm water runoff the city has to treat, so some cities are actually starting to make some collection mandatory.

  • @macgreiner
    @macgreiner 2 года назад +1

    Any construction technique that uses less and produces more is a good deal to me. Big fan of all the sustainable focussed approaches. We have most of the technologies in place, we just start to implement them more.

  • @jeffcarsello1725
    @jeffcarsello1725 2 года назад

    This is such a great channel, really one of the best channels on RUclips. Thanks for posting.

  • @samyoungblood3740
    @samyoungblood3740 2 года назад

    Bill Lishman “fly away home” built an earth ship home in the attic circle sometime in the 60’s. His Earth Integrated home is amazing!

  • @thesystemera
    @thesystemera 2 года назад

    Man. Love how good your vids have gotten. Huge fan.

  • @theSpiritScribe
    @theSpiritScribe Год назад

    Re-using tires is nice and all, but I think COB is the way to go ... especially in colder climates. Cob and strawbale houses have worked for hundreds of years in cold England, Germany et cetera. They may not automatically grow food or filter water, but they are so so beautiful and healthy to live in! Sometimes, the old ways ARE actually the hottest "new! way. ;)

  • @gtonyrodriguez9984
    @gtonyrodriguez9984 2 года назад

    Thank you Matt I love that Privacy idea, you are right I had that problem before, now that would solve the problem, Thank you!

  • @iAmEbolaWoT
    @iAmEbolaWoT 2 года назад

    I have always been facinated by these Earthship Homes. In fact my final for graduating a votech school with the AAS in CADD I was working towards included a full 3D model design for a project of my choice. This was back in 1998 (if memory serves me correctly) and one of the other teachers in a different program (Computer Programming) wanted an Earthship Home. So that is what I chose for my Final Project. I wish I was able to save all those plans and files, and I never found out when the guy retired if he took what I did to an engineer to actually have it built in New Mexico. But that was my first experience with alternate forms of building materials.

  • @remotecontrol1082
    @remotecontrol1082 2 года назад

    These earthships are impressive and I would love one, however they are not suitable everywhere. The bit that impresses me most is the holistic way they build in all their needs literally from the ground up. The bits I want to be able to adopt are the passive heating, water re-use and some sort of solar. Have you checked out the Centre for Alternative Technology in Wales - they have been living off grid since the 1970's and they know what works! Love your channel!

  • @jreese8284
    @jreese8284 2 года назад

    You might want to check out straw bale homes, or firewood-based. These would avoid the problem of chemicals leaching out of the tires; but they have their own drawbacks, too.

  • @MatyasLemberTutorials
    @MatyasLemberTutorials 2 года назад

    Great video Matt. Interesting that they use tires for the soil. In my country we use soil traditionally to build houses. My own one uses these too. The bricks are made of soil/dry grass mixture. They last forever with proper insulation from ground water. There even designs where the walls are constructed with compacted soil/grass mixture. The walls are super thick, and even in super hot summers(40c) they keep cool in the inside. Good stuff for sure

  • @VGAstudent
    @VGAstudent Год назад

    Adopting an earth-ship plan as a community garden to provide local produce during the winter would be interesting to see adopted into a city architecture plan. It would be a great research spot to see what effects VOC's from tires in the walls to absorb heat have on the plants and graywater. It would be something that may provide new filtration systems for water or food for expecting mothers and prevent birth defects, still births, or developmental problems.

  • @ultimoguerreiro82
    @ultimoguerreiro82 2 года назад

    Live in Brazil, building one for myself, a partial design. 3 Acres of woods, will provide me with A LOT of food and building materials, abundant sunlight and 9 months of reliable rain. I recommend that to everyone.

  • @Krazie-Ivan
    @Krazie-Ivan 2 года назад

    my dad was a huge fan of all these ideas, and Earthships ...since the early 80's he kept loads of books around, visited/helped on builds, and we talked a lot about sustainable ideas before he passed.
    the ICF buildings i'm planning utilize earthtubes (10' underground air ducts that absorb the soil's steady-state temp) to feed the ERV (energy recovery ventilation) system with ~62f temp air year-round, instead of only being used for cooling in-conjunction with the stack-effect (as you describe in the vid). this should dramatically increase their efficiency, as the temp delta between the living space & incoming fresh air is minimal. they could also be routed through the exchange half of mini-split heating/cooling systems, giving the heat-pump more temperate air to pull/dissipate heat with (again, higher efficiency).
    not aware that either of those have ever been done before, so i'm pretty excited to test the concepts.

  • @Dan-Simms
    @Dan-Simms 2 года назад

    I've been to a couple earthships in Ontario, my dad and his friend helped build them, and my dad had built many straw bail houses.

  • @matthewstone3210
    @matthewstone3210 2 года назад

    This was an excellent video Matt! As many others have said, it's a good examination of the pros and cons of these types of homes. I've met a couple people who've been in and around Earthships and one of the things they've highlighted is that the off-gassing from the tires can be very unpleasant to people who are sensitive to that sort of thing. Basically, if you get a headache by walking through the tire section of an auto-parts store, you might want to consider a different housing style than Earthships.
    Thanks again for the video!

  • @farhanuzzaman32
    @farhanuzzaman32 2 года назад +1

    This concept is sooooo freaking cool!!

  • @davidsirr9910
    @davidsirr9910 2 года назад

    There is a school in California. A central core is the library. Surrounding that irate classrooms. Out side dart is piled up against reinforced concrete walls which make up the structure of the school. Each room has an exterior door, glass mostly. Skylights provide daylight in room and the library. This school has existed

  • @RedBearAK
    @RedBearAK 2 года назад

    Actually they’ve also demonstrated (via certified state lab testing) zero contamination from growing food plants/trees with black water, not just gray water. The soil organisms and oxygenation from the root systems in the planters purify both gray and black waste sufficiently as long as it is completely contained beneath a couple feet of soil. The septic tank is only required in states that haven’t yet recognized the extraordinary power of the planter system, and most states actually care more about the dangers of gray water. Many Earthships have only used an overflow leach field to direct any excess water in the system to outdoor plants.

  • @krystalbrooks6869
    @krystalbrooks6869 2 года назад

    To me, the aspect of an earth ship that I think we should look at and integrate into our modern homes is: 1) the use of how energy and air circulates in our homes. 2) the water system. Having our water used to it's maximum ability.
    I've done research into homes from long ago that use wind towers to cool their homes.

  • @brileyjf
    @brileyjf 2 года назад

    I'm planning on building my next house with SIREwall techniques. Structurally Insulated Rammed Earth. Basically dirt mixed with portland cement. 2 feet thick walls with 4 inches of foam insulation in the middle to provide a thermal break. I've read that they were able to keep houses in Phoenix during the summer at a comfortable temperature by running a swamp cooler for 4 hours a day.

  • @Justin_Hikes
    @Justin_Hikes 2 года назад

    Earthships are a great topic for a video. I learned a lot. Thanks!

  • @ZacharyRodriguez
    @ZacharyRodriguez 2 года назад

    You post this a day after I binged a few documentaries on Earthships and bermed earth houses. I'm glad you covered it.
    I find cob houses more charming, but I like the concept of any passive house using natural and recycled materials. You covered the cons a bit better than the other videos. The other films I watch put effort selling the affordability gained from up-cycled materials, so seeing your cost estimate was an eye-opener. It makes sense though considering the labor you mentioned, as well as all the dirt and concrete.
    I also watched a video from the guy in Arizona collecting his own water too, so it felt as if you browsed through my history, haha.

    • @oldskooljules
      @oldskooljules 2 года назад

      Some, or many earth ships don't use any concrete at all. It depends on the area you build, and the speed at which you need to build it as to whether you use concrete or not.

  • @jesseyoung7855
    @jesseyoung7855 Год назад

    A lot of the concepts utilized in earthships and passive homes came from traditional building, are very sound, and ought to be incorporated in all construction. For all of the potential drawbacks, and challenges, there are solutions, that's where the opportunity for creativity lies.

  • @giszTube
    @giszTube 2 года назад +1

    What you should talk about next is city design. A city designed not for cars but for people will reduce the number of cars (to be replaced with bikes). This is better for the environment, it even makes driving better as there are much fewer cars on the road. Go see the Not Just Bikes channel. He goes over how intelligent the planning is in the Netherlands... P.S. I too am fascinated with earth ships and will likely never live in one...

  • @ryanzacsanders
    @ryanzacsanders 2 года назад

    YESSS thanks for covering earthships!!