
An Earthship is a style of architecture developed in the late 20th century to early 21st century by architect
Michael Reynolds Mick, Mike or Michael Reynolds may refer to:
Actors
*Mike Reynolds (actor) (1929–2022), American voice actor and writer
*Michael Reynolds, British actor in one episode of BBC's ''David Copperfield'' (1966) and ''The First Churchills'' (1969)
* Mi ...
. Earthships are designed to behave as
passive solar earth shelter
An earth shelter, also called an earth house, earth bermed house, or underground house, is a structure (usually a house) with earth ( soil) against the walls, on the roof, or that is entirely buried underground.
Earth acts as thermal mass, maki ...
s made of both natural and
upcycled materials such as earth-packed
tires. Earthships may feature a variety of amenities and aesthetics, and are designed to withstand the extreme temperatures of a desert, managing to stay close to 70 °F (21 °C) regardless of outside weather conditions. Earthship communities were originally built in the desert of northern
New Mexico, near the
Rio Grande
The Rio Grande ( and ), known in Mexico as the Río Bravo del Norte or simply the Río Bravo, is one of the principal rivers (along with the Colorado River) in the southwestern United States and in northern Mexico.
The length of the Rio G ...
, and the style has spread to small pockets of communities around the globe, in some cases in spite of legal opposition to its construction and adoption.
Reynolds developed the Earthship design after moving to New Mexico and completing his degree in architecture, intending them to be "
off-the-grid-ready" homes, with minimal reliance on
public utilities and
fossil fuels
A fossil fuel is a hydrocarbon-containing material formed naturally in the Earth's crust from the remains of dead plants and animals that is extracted and burned as a fuel. The main fossil fuels are coal, oil, and natural gas. Fossil fuels ...
. They are constructed to use available natural resources, especially energy from the sun and rain water. They are designed with
thermal mass construction and natural cross-ventilation to regulate indoor temperature, and the designs are intentionally uncomplicated and mainly single-story, so that people with little building knowledge can construct them. They can be perceived as a realization of the
utopia of autonomous housing and sustainable living.
History
Earthship architecture began development in the 1970s, when the architect
Michael Reynolds Mick, Mike or Michael Reynolds may refer to:
Actors
*Mike Reynolds (actor) (1929–2022), American voice actor and writer
*Michael Reynolds, British actor in one episode of BBC's ''David Copperfield'' (1966) and ''The First Churchills'' (1969)
* Mi ...
set out to create a home that would fulfill three criteria. First, it would utilize
sustainable architecture
Sustainable architecture is architecture that seeks to minimize the negative environmental impact of buildings through improved efficiency and moderation in the use of materials, energy, development space and the ecosystem at large. Sustainable ...
, and materials indigenous to the local area or
recycled
Recycling is the process of converting waste materials into new materials and objects. The recovery of energy from waste materials is often included in this concept. The recyclability of a material depends on its ability to reacquire the p ...
materials wherever possible. Second, it would rely on natural energy sources and be independent from the electrical grid. Third, it would be feasible for a person with no specialized construction skills to build. Eventually, Reynolds's vision was transformed into the common U-shaped earth-filled tire homes seen today.
The name is based on the idea of a ship or a space ship, in order to allude to the home's ability to provide everything for their inhabitants to survive: shelter, power, waste management, water, and food.
Construction and design
Earthships are predicated upon the idea that there are six human needs which can be addressed through environmentally sustainable building design:
#Energy: Thermal and/or solar heating and cooling, solar and wind electricity
#Garbage management: Reuse and recycling built into construction and daily living
#Sewage treatment: Self-contained sewage treatment and water recycling
#Shelter: Building with natural and recycled materials
#Clean Water: Water harvesting and long term storage
#Food: In-home organic food production capability
The buildings are often horseshoe-shaped due to the difficulty of creating sharp 90 degree angles with rammed tires. In Reynolds's prototype at
Taos, the opening of the horseshoe faces 10–15 degrees east of south to maximize natural light and solar-gain during the winter months, with windows on sun-facing walls admitting light and heat.
The book, ''Earthship I'', describes how to find the best angle depending on the building's geographic location. The thick and dense walls provide thermal mass that naturally regulates the interior temperature during both cold and hot outside temperatures. The outer walls in the majority of Earthships are made of earth-rammed tires, but any dense material with a potential to store heat, such as
concrete,
adobe
Adobe ( ; ) is a building material made from earth and organic materials. is Spanish for ''mudbrick''. In some English-speaking regions of Spanish heritage, such as the Southwestern United States, the term is used to refer to any kind of e ...
,
earth bags, or stone, could in principle be used to create a building similar to an Earthship. The tire walls are staggered like traditional brick work, and often have "concrete half blocks" every other course, to equal the length of the staggered tire below. In an effort to cut down the use of concrete even further, they also use "squishies" - tires rammed in between a tight space to even out the course or to compensate for varying tire size.

The
rammed earth tires of an Earthship are assembled by teams of two people. One person shovels dirt and places it into the tire one scoop at a time. The other person, who stands on the tire, uses a sledgehammer to pack the dirt in while moving in a circle around the tire to keep the dirt even and to avoid warping the tire. Rammed earth tires can weigh up to , so they are typically filled in place. Because the tire is full of soil, it does not burn when exposed to fire. In colder climates, extra insulation is added on the outside of the tire walls.

On top of the tire walls are either "can and concrete bond beams" made of recycled cans joined by concrete, or wooden bond beams with wooden shoes. These are attached to the tire walls using concrete anchors, poured blocks of concrete inside the top tires. Wooden shimming blocks placed on top of the wooden bond beam make up the wooden shoes. The wooden bond beam consists of two layers of lumber bolted on to the concrete anchors. Re-bar is used to "nail" the wooden shoes to the wooden bond beam.
Internal, non-load-bearing walls are often made of a
honeycomb of recycled cans joined by concrete; these are nicknamed
tin can wall
A tin can wall is a wall constructed from tin cans, which are not a common building source. The cans can be laid in concrete, stacked vertically on top of each other, and crushed or cut and flattened to be used as shingles. They can also be us ...
s. These walls are usually thickly plastered with
adobe
Adobe ( ; ) is a building material made from earth and organic materials. is Spanish for ''mudbrick''. In some English-speaking regions of Spanish heritage, such as the Southwestern United States, the term is used to refer to any kind of e ...
, and resemble traditional adobe walls when finished.
The roof is made using trusses, or wooden support beams called
vigas, that rest on the wooden shoes or the tin can walls placed on the bond beams. The roof as well as the north, east and west facing walls are heavily insulated to reduce heat loss.
The average cost in 2019 including labour and land is about $500,000.
Water

Earthships are designed to catch all the water they need from the local environment. Water used in an Earthship is
harvested from rain, snow, and condensation. As water collects on the roof, it is channeled through a silt-catching device and into a cistern. The cisterns are positioned to gravity-feed a water organization module (WOM) that filters out bacteria and contaminants, making it suitable for drinking. The WOM consists of filters and a DC-pump. Water is then pushed into a conventional pressure tank to create common household water pressure.
Water collected in this fashion is used for every household activity except flushing toilets. The toilets are flushed with
greywater which has been used at least once already. Typically it is filtered waste-water from sinks and showers.
Greywater, recycled water unsuitable for drinking, is used within the Earthship primarily for flushing toilets. Before the greywater can be reused, it is channeled through a grease and particle filter/digester and into a deep rubber-lined botanical cell, a miniature
living machine, within the Earthship. Here the water is
oxygenated and
filtered using bacteria and plants to reduce the nutrient load.
Water from the low end of the botanical cell is directed through a
peat moss filter and collected in a reservoir or well. The
reclaimed water
Water reclamation (also called wastewater reuse, water reuse or water recycling) is the process of converting municipal wastewater
Sewage (or domestic sewage, domestic wastewater, municipal wastewater) is a type of wastewater that is produce ...
is passed once more through a greywater board and used to flush conventional toilets.
Black water is water that has been used in a toilet. Earthships utilize
anaerobic digestion in their
septic tanks, which naturally separate solid waste. The black water is used in concrete cells containing plants, separate from the grey water plants in the
greenhouse
A greenhouse (also called a glasshouse, or, if with sufficient heating, a hothouse) is a structure with walls and roof made chiefly of Transparent ceramics, transparent material, such as glass, in which plants requiring regulated climatic condit ...
; it may also be used in exterior planters. Studies on the safety of growing food plants in a black water system show low levels of ''
E. coli
''Escherichia coli'' (),Wells, J. C. (2000) Longman Pronunciation Dictionary. Harlow ngland Pearson Education Ltd. also known as ''E. coli'' (), is a Gram-negative, facultative anaerobic, rod-shaped, coliform bacterium of the genus ''Escher ...
'' bacteria. It is not recommended to plant edibles in black water; building permits may be refused for plans indicating such usage of black water.
Where it is not possible to use flush-toilets operating on water, dry solar toilets are recommended.
Power

Earthships are designed to collect and store their own energy. The majority of electrical energy is harvested from the sun and wind.
Photovoltaic
Photovoltaics (PV) is the conversion of light into electricity using semiconducting materials that exhibit the photovoltaic effect, a phenomenon studied in physics, photochemistry, and electrochemistry. The photovoltaic effect is commercially us ...
panels and
wind turbines on or near the Earthship generate DC electricity that is stored in
deep-cycle batteries
A deep-cycle battery is a battery designed to be regularly deeply discharged using most of its capacity. The term is traditionally mainly used for Lead–acid battery, lead–acid batteries in the same form factor as automotive batteries; and con ...
. The batteries are housed in a purpose-built room on the roof. Additional energy can be obtained from gasoline-powered generators or by integrating with the city grid. For Canadian winters the solar cell exposed surface areas needs to be increased by over three times.
In an Earthship, a Power Organizing Module (POM) takes a proportion of stored energy from batteries and
invert it for AC use. The Power Organizing Module is a prefabricated system provided by Earthship Biotecture that is simply attached to a wall on the interior of the Earthship and wired in a conventional manner. It includes the necessary equipment such as
circuit breakers and
converters. The energy run through the Power Organizing Module can be used to run any household appliance including washing machines, computers, kitchen appliances, print machines, and vacuums. Ideally, none of the electrical energy in an Earthship is used for heating or cooling.
Thermal performance

Earthships rely on a balance between the solar heat gain and the ability of the tire walls and subsoil to transport and store heat. They are designed to use the properties of thermal mass and with the intent that the exterior earth-rammed tire walls provide
thermal mass that will soak up heat during the day and radiate heat during the night, keeping the interior climate relatively comfortable all day. In addition to the exterior tire walls, some Earthships are sunk into the earth to take advantage of
earth-sheltering to reduce temperature fluctuations.
Some earthship structures have suffered from heat loss into the ground during the heating season. This may be due to climatic differences between
New Mexico where earthships were first built and cloudier, cooler, and wetter climates. Thermal performance problems may also have occurred due to
thermal mass being erroneously equated to
R-value. The imperial R-value of soil is about 1 per foot.
Malcolm Wells, an architect and authority on earth-sheltered design, recommends an imperial
R-value 10 insulation between deep soils and heated spaces. Wells's insulation recommendations increase as the depth of the soil decreases (a negative correlation).
In addition to thermal mass, Earthships use
passive solar heating and cooling. Large front windows with integrated
shades
Sunglasses or sun glasses (informally called shades or sunnies; more names below) are a form of protective eyewear designed primarily to prevent bright sunlight and high-energy visible light from damaging or discomforting the eyes. They can so ...
,
trombe walls and other technologies such as
skylights or
Steve Baer's "Track Rack" solar trackers are used for heat regulation. Earthships are positioned so that its principal wall, which is nonstructural and made mostly of glass sheets, faces directly towards the equator. This positioning allows for optimum solar exposure. To allow the sun to heat the mass of the Earthship, the solar-oriented wall is angled so that it is perpendicular to light from the winter sun. This allows for maximum exposure in the winter, when heat is wanted, and lesser exposure in the summer, when heat is to be avoided. Some Earthships, especially those built in colder climates, use insulated shading on the solar-orientated wall to reduce heat loss during the night.
Current Earthship designs like the global module have a "double greenhouse" where the outside glass is angled towards the equator, and an internal glass wall forms a walk way or hallway as you step into the Earthship. This greenhouse is primarily used to grow food; it also creates a barrier for the 'comfort zone' inside the house.
Ventilation

Earthships structures have a
natural ventilation system based on
convection. A pipe extends from the interior of the house under the berm, cooling the air by the time it gets to the comfort zone. As the hot air rises, the system creates a steady airflow - of cooler air coming in, and warmer air blowing out though a smaller vented window in the greenhouse.
Around the world
Africa

The first earthship in South Africa was built by Angel and Yvonne Kamp between 1996 and 1998. They rammed a total of 1,500 tires for the walls. The Earthship, near
Hermanus, is located in a 60 hectare private nature reserve which is part of a 500 hectare area enclosed in a game fence and borders the
Walker Bay Nature Reserve.
The second earthship in South Africa is a recycling centre in Khayelitsha run as a swop shop concept. The centre was finished in December 2010. Another low cost house built with tires is in development in
Bloemfontein.
A project nearing completion in
South Africa is a combined living quarters and the Sonskip / Aardskip open air museum in
Orania. This earthship is based on the global earthship model and is built with a foundation of tires, has roof bearing walls built with
earthbags, and interior walls built with cob, cans and plastic bottles. This earthship adheres to all six principles of an earthship. This is the largest earthbag earthship in the world.
A residential house was in the planning phase for Swaziland (now
Eswatini
Eswatini ( ; ss, eSwatini ), officially the Kingdom of Eswatini and formerly named Swaziland ( ; officially renamed in 2018), is a landlocked country in Southern Africa. It is bordered by Mozambique to its northeast and South Africa to its no ...
in 2013.
In 2011, construction began on the Goderich
Waldorf School of
Sierra Leone. The school was the first educational institution to use earthship architecture. Although Mike Reynolds and a team of interns helped complete the first two classrooms, the majority of the building was built by community members who had been trained in Reynolds' building techniques.
A new project was scheduled to commence in
Malawi in October 2013.During that first visit, the team was able to complete two of the intended 8 rooms. Biotechure Planet Earth came back to collaborate on the Malawi project in 2015 in order to complete the community center for the rural village. The crew was made up of a group of volunteers as well as locals all made up to create an 8 room building made out of tires, cans and bottles. Finally, in a webpost uploaed on February 2020, it was confirmed that the community structure in Kapita, Malawi was able to be finished.
Australia
Earthship Ironbankwas built by Martin and
Zoe Freney
Zoe Freney is a South Australian artist, arts writer and arts educator. She and her husband, Martin Freney, have also built Australia’s first council-approved Earthship.
Biography
Freney has a Diploma of Visual Art from Adelaide Central S ...
south-east of Adelaide in South Australia and is the first earthship constructed with council permission in Australia.
Europe

In 2000,
Michael Reynolds Mick, Mike or Michael Reynolds may refer to:
Actors
*Mike Reynolds (actor) (1929–2022), American voice actor and writer
*Michael Reynolds, British actor in one episode of BBC's ''David Copperfield'' (1966) and ''The First Churchills'' (1969)
* Mi ...
and his team came to build the first residential earthship in Boingt (Belgium). While water, power module, solar panels and the team were on their way to Europe, the mayor of Boingt put his veto on the building permit. Josephine Overeem, the woman who wanted to build the earthship, and Michael Reynolds decided to do a demonstration model in her back yard at her residence in
Strombeek (Belgium). CLEVEL invited Reynolds from Belgium to Brighton in the UK, and orchestrated plans for the earthship in Brighton, started in 2003. This was the beginning of a series of trips made by Reynolds and the construction of earthships in the UK, France and the Netherlands.
In 2004, the very first Earthship in the UK was opened at
Kinghorn Loch in Fife, Scotland. It was built by volunteers of the SCI charity. In 2005, the first earthship in England was established in
Stanmer Park
Stanmer Park is a large public park immediately to the west of the University of Sussex, and to the north-east of the city of Brighton in the county of East Sussex, England, United Kingdom, UK. It is a Local Nature Reserve and English Heritage, un ...
,
Brighton
Brighton () is a seaside resort and one of the two main areas of the City of Brighton and Hove in the county of East Sussex, England. It is located south of London.
Archaeological evidence of settlement in the area dates back to the Bronze A ...
with the
Low Carbon Trust
Low or LOW or lows, may refer to:
People
* Low (surname), listing people surnamed Low
Places
* Low, Quebec, Canada
* Low, Utah, United States
* Lo Wu station (MTR code LOW), Hong Kong; a rail station
* Salzburg Airport (ICAO airport code: LOW ...
. In 2007, CLEVEL and Earthship Biotecture obtained planning permission to build on a development site overlooking the
Brighton Marina in the UK. The application followed a six-month feasibility study, orchestrated by Daren Howarth, Kevan Trott and Michael Reynolds and funded by the UK Environment Agency and the Energy Savings Trust. The successful application was for sixteen one, two, and three-bedroom earthship homes on this site, expected to have a sale price of 250 - 400,000 pounds. The homes are all designed according to basic earthship principles developed in the United States and adapted to the UK. 15,000 tires will be recycled to construct these homes (the UK burns approximately 40 million tires each year). The plans include the enhancement of habitats on the site for
lizard
Lizards are a widespread group of squamate reptiles, with over 7,000 species, ranging across all continents except Antarctica, as well as most oceanic island chains. The group is paraphyletic since it excludes the snakes and Amphisbaenia alt ...
s that already live there, which is the reasoning behind entitling the project "The Lizard". This would have been the first development of its kind in Europe.
The first official Earthship home in mainland Europe with official planning permission approval was built in a small French village called Ger. The home, which was owned by Kevan and Gillian Trott, was built in April 2007 by Kevan, Mike Reynolds and an Earthship Crew from Taos, it was sold to a family in 2014. The design was modified for a European climate and is seen as the first of many for the European arena. It is currently used as a holiday home for eco-tourists.
Further adaptation to the European context was undertaken by Daren Howarth and Adrianne Nortje in
Brittany, France. They obtained full planning permission in 2007 and finished the Brittany Groundhouse as their own home during 2009. The build experience and learning is documented in the UK
Grand Designs
''Grand Designs'' is a British television series produced by Boundless and broadcast on Channel 4 which features unusual and often elaborate architectural homebuilding projects.
The programme has been presented by Kevin McCloud since it first ...
series and in their book.
Earthships have been built or are being built in Portugal, Spain, France, Belgium, The Netherlands, United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Estonia and Czech Republic.
The first official earthship district (23 earthships) in Europe was developed in
Olst
Olst is a town in the Dutch province of Overijssel, about 8 km north of Deventer. It is located in the municipality of Olst-Wijhe.
History
The village was first mentioned in 947 Holsto. The etymology is unknown. Olst is an ''esdorp'' which ...
(the Netherlands). Building started in Spring 2012 and completed in December, 2014. In Belgium, 1 earthship hybrid is also being built, intended as demonstration buildings. Since it is illegal to use tires in Belgium (for risk of leaking toxic metals like lead and zinc), the project uses
earthbags instead.
The Earthships built in Europe by
Michael Reynolds Mick, Mike or Michael Reynolds may refer to:
Actors
*Mike Reynolds (actor) (1929–2022), American voice actor and writer
*Michael Reynolds, British actor in one episode of BBC's ''David Copperfield'' (1966) and ''The First Churchills'' (1969)
* Mi ...
have to be adapted to perform as intended. Some showed problems with moisture and mould. Some research into thermal performance was done by the University of Brighton on the Brighton Earthship. The first successful construction of an Earthship in Germany (Tempelhof/Kreßberg, 2015/16) used fewer thermal bridges but increased insulation in cooperation with a Fraunhofer Institute to prevent any mould problems.
Central America
An earthship was constructed in 2015 by the Atkinson family in southern
Belize. It featured on the June 2015 UK
Channel 4 TV programme
Escape to the Wild
''Escape to the Wild'' is a British television series produced by Optomen television and broadcast on Channel 4. It was originally titled, ''Kevin McCloud's Escape to the Wild'', with Kevin McCloud
Kevin McCloud, (born 8 May 1959) is a Br ...
, season 1, episode 3.
Guatemala
Guatemala ( ; ), officially the Republic of Guatemala ( es, República de Guatemala, links=no), is a country in Central America. It is bordered to the north and west by Mexico; to the northeast by Belize and the Caribbean; to the east by H ...
also hosts two earthships.
South America
The first Earthship in
South America was built in January 2014 in the town of
Ushuaia,
Tierra del Fuego,
Argentina. Today this building functions as a visitor center and example of self-sustainable living.
In March 2016, an Earthship school was built in
Jaureguiberry,
Uruguay.
In May 2018, another Earthship school was built in
Mar Chiquita
Mar Chiquita is a coastal lagoon in the southeast province of Buenos Aires in eastern Argentina. It is located by the Atlantic coast, 30 km north of Mar del Plata.
The area is a natural reserve where a number of animal species live around ...
,
Argentina.
New Zealand
An earthship has been built by Dawn and Lance Kirtlan near
Ashburton, Canterbury. They were inspired by Mike Reynold's books and worked with a local architect and engineer, reporting that the local council were very supportive of the project.
In popular culture
The film ''
Garbage Warrior
''Garbage Warrior'' is a 2007 American film about architect Mike Reynolds, inventor of the Earthship style of building, directed by Oliver Hodge.
Plot
It follows Reynolds and how he developed the Earthship style of building and his struggle with ...
'' is about Earthships and Reynolds' struggle with obtaining permits to build out of unconventional material and off the grid.
The television series ''Building Off the Grid'' which aired on the
DIY Network featured a home construction episode on building an Earthship.
See also
*
Hurricane-proof building
*
Permaculture
*
Peter Vetsch
*
Repurposing
*
Solar thermal energy
Notes
References
*Contractor’s Report to the Board: Designing Building Products Made With Recycled Tires. Published by the California Integrated Waste Management Board in June 2004. Produced under contract by: Chris Hammer, The Elements Division of BNIM Architects Terry A. Gray, T. A. G. Resource Recovery. Accessed at: http://www.calrecycle.ca.gov/Publications/Documents/GreenBuilding%5C43304008.pdf on 5 February 2015.
* Hewitt, M. and Telfer, K. (2007). ''Earthships: building a zero carbon future for homes''.
* Klippel, James H. https://web.archive.org/web/20090511014310/http://www.garrellassociates.com/EcoDesign.html, green page
* Howarth, D. & Nortje, A. (2010). "Groundhouse Build & Cook".
Further reading
* Schirber, Michael
"Making Earthships Mainstream"on ''Going Green at
msnbc.com
MSNBC (originally the Microsoft National Broadcasting Company) is an American news-based pay television cable channel. It is owned by NBCUniversala subsidiary of Comcast. Headquartered in New York City, it provides news coverage and political ...
'', November 12, 2007.
External links
* {{official website, http://www.earthship.com
Earthship BrightonEarthship GermanyEarthship Denmark
Masonry
Solar architecture
Sustainable architecture
Sustainable building
Architecture related to utopias