Passive Annual Heat Storage: Improving the Design of Earth Sheltered Homes – Mother Earth News

Article first appeared in Mother Earth News, January/February 1985. Click here to view article at their website.

By John Hait

This geodesic dome is a new type of earth sheltered home.

Are you pooped out from paying the power people to pump heat into your home all winter, only to pay them again to pump it back out all summer? If so, maybe it’s time to open a special sort of back-to-the-land savings account—one that will let you make energy deposits all summer and withdrawals in the winter. And just where do you put six months of intense seasonal sunshine for safekeeping? To find the answer, you only have to look down, because you’re standing on the bank!

As you know, the earth exchanges heat constantly, soaking it up from the sun all summer and giving it up to the atmosphere in the winter. In most areas, this annual flux doesn’t level off until a depth of about 20 feet is reached—where the year-round temperature hovers near the average annual air temperature. A 20-foot depth of earth, then, can be a mighty big savings account, and it’s dirt cheap. However, to open such an account, you’ve got to figure out how to make deposits and withdrawals, and you ought to find a way to keep the vault secure from robbers. [Read more...]

Sustainable Living

How can I build a home that self-maintains year round comfort without commercial power?

Use your home itself to collect free solar heat all summer.

  • Cool your home passively, while heating the earth around your home, without machinery and off grid.
  • Keep your home cozy all winter by retrieving heat from the soil.
  • Utilize the free solar heat stored throughout the summer as a year round natural thermal resource.
  • Power a convection ventilation system using stored heat that provides warm air all winter and cool air all summer. [Read more...]

Umbrella Homes (Featured in Popular Science)

Article from Popular Science, August 1986, pages 64-66. To read the entire article click here.

A simple underground house design uses a novel insulating/water-shedding blanket that covers the structure and surrounding soil. The umbrella creates a huge subterranean thermal reservoir that soaks up the sun’s energy during summertime and stores it for winter heating. In many cases, the clever design makes a heating system unnecessary. [Read more...]