Ottawa Citizen

COUNTRY LIVING OFF THE GRID

Take a tour of Alberta’s first official ‘earthship’ dwelling

- ANNALISE KLINGBEIL

Alberta ‘earthship’ sustains itself

In the dead of winter, in the middle of the southern Alberta prairies, the Kinneys’ Christmas dinner included juicy tomatoes freshly picked from the family’s new home.

Producing vegetables even when there’s snow on the ground isn’t the only feature that makes the Kinneys’ abode unusual.

Made of 800 recycled tires and 12,000 cans encased in mortar, the long and skinny bungalow is a radically sustainabl­e building that offers all the comforts of a modern home without any electricit­y or water bills.

The dwelling has running water, flush toilets, a washer and dryer, a television and Internet.

More impressive­ly, the off-grid structure grows its own food, treats and recycles its grey water, generates its own electricit­y, and regulates its temperatur­e, whether the mercury outside is hovering around -30 or +35 C.

Located north of Lethbridge, past rolling prairies in a stunning scenic valley, the couple’s retirement home is Alberta’s first official earthship.

“When people first hear the word (earthship), they think hippie-dippie, tinfoil-hat-type things,” said co-owner Glen Kinney. “Once you explain it they start to get the idea. It’s sustainabl­e.”

Constructe­d during the summer of 2014, the home blends into the barren natural environmen­t and faces south for maximum sun exposure to best charge the building’s solar-power system.

The front of the structure is covered in large glass windows and a greenhouse runs the length of the front wall, serving as a main hallway and air barrier between the living space and the outdoors.

The greenhouse also produces vegetables year-round, including those tasty tomatoes the Kinney family enjoyed while spending Christmas at their newly built earthship.

Insulation and sunlight mean the home stays warm in the winter, while earth tubes and ceiling vents keep it cool in the summer.

Rainwater is caught by the metal roof and collected, treated, and filtered down into the home, where it’s ready to drink.

The earthship reuses all household sewage in indoor and outdoor treatment cells for food production and landscapin­g, without polluting aquifers, says a website describing typical design features. Toilets flush with non-stinky grey water.

The house produces its own electricit­y with a photovolta­ic/ wind power system. The energy is stored in batteries.

Kinney and his wife spent five weeks building the earthship with help from their adult children, volunteers from around the world, and a paid crew of 13 people from Earthship Biotecture last summer.

Michael Reynolds, founder of Earthship Biotecture and the inventor of earthships, attended the build. It marked the first time an official Earthship Biotecture­built structure was constructe­d in Alberta.

“What these buildings exemplify is that it’s entirely possible to have everything you need in luxury — flat-screen TV, high-speed Internet, everything — without spending a dime and certainly without hurting the planet,” Reynolds said when he was in Alberta during a July interview.

The American architect coined the term earthship more than two decades ago, a name he picked because, like a ship, the homes are fully independen­t vessels.

The alternativ­e housing form has evolved over the years and became better known following a 2007 documentar­y, called Garbage Warrior, about Reynolds and his “green disciples.” From the outside, the Kinney home is reminiscen­t of a dwelling a hobbit might live in.

But inside, the radical residence looks like something out of the pages of a rustic home decor magazine.

The earthship contains three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a kitchen and a cosy living room.

The skinny bungalow cost the same to build as what a similarsiz­ed structure in Calgary would have cost, according to Kinney.

“It’s a funky off-grid home,” said Kinney’s adult son Duncan, who lives in Edmonton.

“It’s a really great space. It’s fun to visit. It’s refreshing to visit. I’m excited to drive five hours to get to it.”

Kinney was introduced to the alternativ­e housing concept several years ago by his son, who read about earthships in a book by Calgary journalist Chris Turner.

Like many converts, the fatherson duo volunteere­d on other earthship builds and gained firsthand experience before undertakin­g a project of their own.

The Kinney family got the plans for their earthship from Global Model.

The family’s unusual green abode has attracted plenty of attention — when the Kinneys hosted an open house in the summer before the earthship was finished, hundreds of people came to marvel at the structure’s systems and ask questions.

“Earthships can inspire a lot of interest and ours certainly fell into that category,” said Duncan, who is looking forward to many more Christmas dinners in his family’s sustainabl­e abode.

“It’s a nice back-pocket fantasy to have: I’ll go and get a spot of land and build an earthship and live offgrid. It scratches a lot of itches for a lot of different people.”

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS: CHRISTINA RYAN/CALGARY HERALD ?? The Kinney family’s ‘earthship’ home is a sustainabl­e building that features the comforts of a modern home without any electricit­y or water bills.
PHOTOS: CHRISTINA RYAN/CALGARY HERALD The Kinney family’s ‘earthship’ home is a sustainabl­e building that features the comforts of a modern home without any electricit­y or water bills.
 ??  ?? The earthship reuses all household sewage in indoor and outdoor treatment cells for food production and landscapin­g, without polluting aquifers.
The earthship reuses all household sewage in indoor and outdoor treatment cells for food production and landscapin­g, without polluting aquifers.
 ??  ?? The front of the structure is covered in large glass windows and a greenhouse runs the length of the front wall, serving as a main hallway and air barrier between the living space and the outdoors.
The front of the structure is covered in large glass windows and a greenhouse runs the length of the front wall, serving as a main hallway and air barrier between the living space and the outdoors.
 ??  ?? Inside, the radical residence looks like something out of the pages of a rustic home decor magazine.
Inside, the radical residence looks like something out of the pages of a rustic home decor magazine.

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