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Earthship Huts – Low Hanging Fruit in the Fight Against Poverty

Beavers and wasps can build their own homes… — Michael Reynolds

History

Modern Earthships are shelters built to sustain their occupants by providing energy, water, and waste management through the use of passive systems. They have been designed to meet the rigorous criteria that are found in the building codes of so many western governments. While these modern Earthships are quite pleasing structures, they owe their heritage to a series of evolutions Michael Reynolds developed over a 40+ year period in remote lands surrounding Taos, New Mexico in the United States of America. While experimenting with recycled materials for construction, a design known as “the hut” was born of earth-rammed tires, aluminum cans, cement, and some metal framing. It is an ultra light house in every sense, except physically.


The ‘hut’

Overview

The core value of the hut is that it can be deployed anywhere in the world with the waste materials of the location becoming much of the construction material. This reduces both the cost and the energy input of the structure, often resulting in carbon negative buildings, and over time the hut will provide your basic needs carbon neutrally. The construction can be accomplished by anyone fit enough to hammer dirt; there are no special skills and only basic hand tools are required. It is a great training structure because of the shallow learning curve, as well as being modular in design. After you have finished your first hut, you can build more next to it to create a chain of “U” rooms that are attached by a main hallway similar to the more modern Earthship designs.

Materials

The main way the hut aims to reduce its impact during construction is through using ‘waste’ materials. The recycled items include tires, cardboard, glass, plastic and aluminum containers, as well as clothing or rags. Many of the other items, such as rebar or doors, can be salvaged to reduce the impact of the project further.

Modern building techniques utilize a great deal of wood that is not available in much of the developing world, and is quickly becoming scarcer in the developed world. The lack of resources often coincides with large garbage dumps that can be gold mines of materials to the savvy eye. Beyond the aforementioned, the metal sides of washers and dryers can be re-purposed as large shingles, or wattle-style wall panels.

Tires

A major component to the construction of Earthships are recycled tires. These can be hammered full of local dirt, sand, and debris to form 136kg (300lb) “bricks”. These preform similar to a thick earthen wall, but have the added bonus of being wrapped in an extremely durable tire. The tires are wide enough so that no foundation is required; the ground can be leveled and the first row of tires pounded into place with no major preparation to the ground. This also mates the hut with the Earth. This provides another degree of insurance against earthquakes.

Bottles/Cans

By using aluminum cans, you can form custom walls and frames of all sorts. The cans create a lattice effect in the cement that is very strong while at the same time reducing the weight and required materials. Glass bottles can also be used to add a stained-glass effect to your wall. Cut 2 colored bottles in half and duct tape them together. When you lay this bottle/brick in place allow the edges to stick out a little bit so that they will be flush with your finished plaster wall. The bottles can also be used as filling space between the tires as you plaster your interior.


Can wall


Glass bottle wall

The Roof

Depending on the climate, a one or two layer roof can be installed. In hot climates the second roof acts as an umbrella, shading the inner roof. In colder climates the space between the roofs is insulated. More moderate climates, or hot climates with sufficient shade to keep the house out of the sun, may be able to function acceptably with only a single roof layer.

The roof frame is constructed of rebar and chicken wire mesh; it is attached to rebar that extends past the top of the tire wall. Once the frame is in place you will need to install your vent or solar chimney. Good circulation and venting of the air in an Earthship is important because the soil used can off-gas things like radon that you do not want lingering in your house. Earth tubes and a solar chimney can keep sufficient fresh air circulating. Flat timber roofs or thatch can be applied to the hut design with very minor modifications.

Cover the wire frame by dipping recycled clothing into a cement mixture and apply them to the frame as in paper-mache. This layer can then be built up with several scratch layers and eventually finished with a smooth layer. The roof will be surrounded by a gutter to direct rain water into the cistern.

Cistern

By utilizing the cement can-wall technique you can create cisterns of varying capacity. The construction is straightforward and similar to the hut design. You can build at the surface of the ground, or, ideally, you can partially bury the cistern. A rebar cement roof, tin, thatch, or any local roofing material will suffice. The cistern can also be placed below the hut in a modified design; this placement has the added benefit of functioning similar to the Earth-tube cooling in that the cool water in the cistern will cool the hot air before it enters the living space.

Simple rain gutters can be made with a chicken wire frame coated with cement soaked clothing, and then adding a few more layers. These gutters, on both the hut and the cistern, will offer enough water for a couple to survive on, and grow a kitchen garden, given about 100mm (4in) of annual rainfall.

Water Management

To allow for survival on such a small amount of rain requires multiplying the work your water does. The first use of your water will be drinking, bathing, or cooking. Next, the grey water from your sink and shower leads to a series of sealed garden beds, often indoors. This provides a nutrient rich drink to the plants while also cleaning up the water before eventually overflowing into tank that is used for flushing the toilet. Black water from a toilet then goes through an anaerobic septic system before being fed into another, outdoor, bed.

By adding a pressure tank and treatment filters, your rainwater will be indistinguishable, and likely purer, from standard utility water. In more advanced Earthships this water management system is called the Water Organization Module (WOM).

Heat

Most places of the world will require an adjustment to the interior temperature of the hut to make it livable. Both heating and cooling effects are passive and designed in. The fundamental basis of heating/cooling is that the Earth’s temperature is a fairly steady 14°C (58°F). By burying your house about a meter below the surface you will insulate the Earth’s wonderful thermal mass below you. The hut can then be heated with solar gain via the appropriate placement of glass given your latitude and situation. The Earth-filled tires, and the below ground wall, act as a great thermal mass to store energy all day, radiating it into the hut at night. The floor is another thermal mass that is heated similarly to what is taught in the Permaculture Designer’s Manual. The walls extend all the way to the ground, capturing the solar gain without allowing any to escape out the sides similarly to adding insulation around the skirt of your house.

Again following permaculture design directives, the hut should be positioned to catch the winter sun and shade out the summer sun. By orienting your roof-line to the sun angles you can allow in enough sun during the cold months of the year to charge all the thermal mass with heat. This heat radiates to warm the hut overnight, cued by the change in air and wall temperature difference. This often occurs around 3am, just when you might normally feel a little chilly.

Cooling

To add passive cooling to the house you can utilize what are sometimes called “Geo-coupled thermal tubes”, simple pipes or passages below ground where hot air is cooled before entering the shelter. Dig a trench 1m deep and 20-50m long depending on your climate; the hotter the temperature, the longer the tube. By taking advantage of the thermosyphon effect created by the solar chimney exhausting the air in the shelter to create a lower pressure space, we allow a passive airflow to occur through the underground passage, into the shelter, and out the solar chimney. As the hot and humid air moves through the Earth-tube it will cool to the ~14°C (58°F) as well as draw the humidity out. Cool dry air entering the shelter will be the result.

When constructing your Earth-tubes, it is a good idea to grade them slightly away from the hut. As the humidity is deposited in the tube a buildup of water can occur. If the passage is graded away from the house, the water will pool away from the hut. This water soaks back into the ground, watering whatever you decide to plant around your Earth-tube’s inlet.

Disaster Relief

The hut design shines in the developing world where construction materials are in limited supply and unskilled labor is in surplus. Almost all places in the world where this kind of house would be welcomed also have an overabundance of tires.

Earthship creator Reynolds has proven the viability of the hut as a disaster relief structure in Indonesia, Haiti, and Mexico following their respective earthquakes and tsunamis. This relief structure is not a transitional one though; by conserving energy and building it right the first time, you can free up time in the future to further develop your region.


Buckyball

The hut is an extremely resilient structure and can stand up to tremendous forces while at the same time being “attached” to the Earth, not floating on a footer, to give it stability in an earthquake. The dome roof of the hut is a strong shape, but could likely be strengthened by building a buckminsterfullerene (or buckyball) frame to cement over. The shape of the dome also allows for the easy deflection of wind and water, making it ideal for standing up to tropical storms.

Concerns

A concern often raised is the off-gassing of the tires. The study: "Use of Scrap Tires in Civil and Environmental Construction" May 10, 1995. Environmental Geo-technics Report No. 95-2, prepared by the Geo-technical Engineering Program Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering at the University of Wisconsin has determined that there are no adverse effects to building with tires in this manner. The cover page and more detailed information can be found here. https://earthship.org/offgassing

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Materials for one 12′ Hut

  • 70 bags of cement
  • 11 bags structolite
  • 8 cubic yards concrete sand
  • 6.5 cubic yards plaster sand
  • 4 bags engineering fibers
  • 2 bags calcium chloride
  • 15 1/2” rebar, 20 foot length
  • 5 3/8” rebar, 20 foot length
  • 4 rolls bailing wire
  • 2 rolls stucco netting
  • 36 sheets metal lath
  • 10 sheets greyboard
  • 2 rolls 6mm plastic
  • 1 stove pipe
  • 1 storm collar
  • 1 cap
  • 1 window screen
  • 1 damper/stove plug
  • 2 rolls duct tape
  • 6 tubes silicon caulk
  • 1 tube liquid nails
  • 2 sheets sand paper
  • 1 bag chopped straw
  • 6 gallon boiled linseed oil
  • 6 gallon mineral spirits
  • 5 gallon primer
  • 5 gallon acryshield
  • Lumber for door buck/frame
  • Glass door
  • Assorted nails
  • Batting insulation
  • Tiles
  • Flagstone
  • Cardboard
  • Water
  • Straw
  • Styrofoam
  • Tires
  • Bottles/Cans

Total for the hut ~$2500USD.

10 Comments

  1. I think the Earthship folks probably have the best zone 0 and zone 1 design practices the world over, at least as an organization. The water system looks precarious though because you end up storing grey water, and if it’s not cleaned well enough by the interior botanical cell, it will go anaerobic very quickly, and that’s inside the house.

  2. I would love to build one of these. Here in France they are busy putting up little breeze block bungalows everywhere. Pity

  3. I have space to build in France but wonder if I’d ever get building permission for something like this?

    1. Where in France are you planning to build, Barbara?
      I’m thinking of going back to France within a year or two and build an Earthship there. I’m currently an Earthship Academy student.

  4. With this and many other alternative building techniques it’s wise to make a realistic estimate of the time and labor required. Packing tires with earth is a laborious process. And then there is the finish work. I once helped on a small (maybe 4X5 meter square) strawbale house. The bales were stacked in one day. The plastering, inside and out, took the owner another three years….it was easy to host a work party for the exciting, quick work of stacking the bales, but help was harder to find for the monotonous plastering! Same for an earthbag dome I helped on a few times, except there, even filling and stacking the bags got old pretty quickly. Not that it wasn’t worth it, and both structures have fulfilled their purpose, but there were definitely motivational problems along the way.
    The embodied energy of concrete is also a concern. Perhaps more cob? I made a wonderful waterproof roof twice with multiple layers of carpet and plastic…with a very think coat of cement stucco on the very top.

  5. Barbara, If you want to do great things, stop asking permission. :) (worst legal advice ever)

    Bob, Labor is a non-issue in the developing world where I envision huts being the most useful. If you are a Haitian or African in true poverty, you will jump at the chance to pound tires if the result were a self sufficient shelter that would last generations. 15 minutes per tire once you are in shape and “get it”.

    I worried about the concrete also, but in the places where I am suggesting to build these the ENTIRE house is often built out of concrete! https://cementtrust.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/block-house.jpg

  6. Barbara, There are at least two earthships in France, that I know of. One was featured in an issue of the Permaculture Magazine, and the other on Channel 4 Grand Designs and I think were both built with full permission.

  7. Good morning,
    I am wondering how many tires are needed to build this 12′ hut, so I would know how many to get?

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