Saturday Star

Earthships – off the wall or off the grid?

- NICK ASPINWALL Washington Post

MIKE Reynolds never worried too much as the world inched closer to doomsday.

In early 2020, motorists lined up in their cars outside grocery stores waiting for food as the coronaviru­s pandemic first wrapped its tentacles around the global supply chain.

“I was watching that on TV and then walking down the hallway of my building, picking bananas and spinach and kale and tomatoes and eating them. Barefoot, because my building was warm without fuel,” Reynolds said. “My Earthship took care of me.”

Earthships are off-grid, self-reliant houses built from tyres, dirt and garbage that have long been an offbeat curiosity for travellers passing by the ski town of Taos, New Mexico, but suddenly look like a haven for climate doomers. Residents of the 254ha flagship Earthship community treat their own waste, collect their own water, grow their own food, and regulate their own temperatur­e by relying on the sun, rain and earth, which Reynolds and other adherents call natural “phenomena”.

Reynolds, 76, has been building these structures – he calls them “vessels” – since the early 1970s when, after graduating from architectu­re school at the University of Cincinnati, he took up off-road motorcycle racing on the high desert plateau around Taos to try to injure himself to avoid being drafted to the Vietnam War. He never left, attracting interest and eyerolls as dozens of Earthships arose from the dirt.

“They were talking about a freak on the mesa in New Mexico building buildings out of garbage. That was scandalous,” Reynolds said. But he gained more followers as people became more conscious of climate change, and 2020 brought a surge of interest in new constructi­on. “Now,” he said, “all they’re doing is just going apes***.”

New Earthships once used to sit dormant for years, but many are now sold before they’re even completed as the pandemic has drawn people to an oasis of self-sufficienc­y. They range from dreamers such as Linda May, who was depicted in the film Nomadland and whose ultimate goal was to build an Earthship, to young people anxious about a worsening climate, a housing shortage, and the dark promise of eternally escalating electricit­y and heating costs. To them, Earthships offer a life free of grids and bills; a clean break from a world that feels like it’s on the verge of breaking itself.

“It’s hard for me to even think of going back to a convention­al house,” said Freya Dobson, 24, who recently travelled from New York to join an academy that teaches people how to build Earthships. “This is a real solution for living.”

Earthships operate using six green-building principles governing heating and cooling, solar electricit­y, water collection, sewage treatment, food production, and the use of natural and recycled materials. This meant that when Earthships emerged in the 1970s, they “addressed something nobody else did: what do we do with garbage?” said Rachel Preston Prinz, a green designer in Santa Fe, New Mexico, who wrote the book Hacking the Earthship.

About 40% of a typical Earthship is built with natural or recycled materials, most notably foundation­s and walls made up of hundreds of used tyres packed with dirt. These work with dual layers of floor-to-ceiling passive solar windows, which collect sun during winter and reject it in the summer to keep structures at a comfortabl­e room temperatur­e, no matter the weather.

Inside a usual customised Earthship, are arched, cavernous living spaces.

Plants line corridors between inner and outer windows, while glass bottles and aluminum cans stuffed inside walls make rooms look like mosaic playground­s.

“It’s incredibly beautiful,” said Britt Shacham Bernstein, 25, soon after visiting an Earthship for the first time. “There’s a whole ecosystem in here, and you’re a part of the ecosystem.”

Earthships originally spawned from the arid climate of Taos, maximising abundant sunlight while squeezing whatever they can from about 20cm of annual rainfall. Each Earthship shares a set of core organs such as a water organisati­on module, which filters and separates water as it moves throughout the house. In the Earthship ecosystem, water is first used for drinking, showering and hand washing before moving to interior plants, such as fig and banana trees, along with hanging gardens of herbs and flowers. The resulting “black water” is used in the toilet before being flushed into a septic tank, where it fertilises ornamental outdoor plants and can then be safely released into the groundwate­r supply.

You’d never know what your house is doing with your waste.

“I often hear: ‘It smells really great in here’,” said Meredith Albury, a tour guide and photograph­er for Earthship Biotecture, the eco-constructi­on company Reynolds founded to build Earthships.

Another module controls solar power, which is used primarily for lights and appliances. Earthships use about one-sixth as much power as a convention­al house. “You take care of it, it’ll take care of you,” Albury said. “It’s very symbiotic.”

A typical Earthship can produce 25 to 50% of the food its residents need, depending on a multitude of factors including diet, climate and how much time is spent on garden maintenanc­e, said Phil Basehart, a constructi­on team leader. If you follow a plant-based diet, you may never have to visit a grocery store again. This appeals not only to rugged survivalis­ts, but to people suddenly worried about where their food will come from after the pandemic. “We got more business because of it,” Basehart said. “People were looking at this as their panic room, so to speak.”

Earthships sell for prices similar to convention­al homes of comparable size and location, and cost slightly more to build, although their design can save owners money over time in utility costs.

But there are also stories of failed builds and abandoned projects, sometimes after tens of thousands of dollars have been spent, and Reynolds has faced lawsuits from unsatisfie­d buyers. Earthships are experiment­al, evolving and imperfect structures, and enthusiast­s warn against buying or building one before participat­ing in an Earthship Academy, in which students pay about $1000 (about R15500) to spend a month helping with a build and taking classes on constructi­on and maintenanc­e.

A study on Earthships built in London, Paris and Spain showed it is largely successful at providing thermal comfort without heating or cooling.

Reynolds has turned his focus to a new model, which he calls Unity, that incorporat­es cost-cutting measures such as eliminatin­g roof vents and using just one layer of glass windows. This could make builds about one-third cheaper than most Earthships. As he pounded tyres into submission, the gray-maned Reynolds said he wants these structures to be more efficient so inhabitant­s can take what they need from the earth, rather than relying on a global economy of abundance. “A lion doesn’t kill 40 elk and stash them somewhere,” he said. “He kills an elk every time he gets hungry.”

You hear a lot of this talk on the mesa – how self-sufficienc­y can mesh with symbiosis to entirely invert our world of dependency and domination – and you start to imagine a world in which Earthships make up our homes, offices, supermarke­ts and hospitals. Oil and gas companies would crumble, and yesterday’s hulking SUVS would serve not as a smoulderin­g dystopian backdrop, but as insulation for your living room.

Reynolds has tried to build multifamil­y and commercial structures for years but has run into permit problems.

Reynolds knows humanity needs time to be swayed. He compares people to a banana plant in his Earthship that, as the months pass, gradually bends to reach the sunlight. Just before the pandemic, he received a diagnosis of Stage 4 prostate cancer. It has driven him to build as many Earthships as he possibly can.

“It’s got to be down to, the Titanic’s got to be sinking, and this is the life raft,” he said. “But selling them on the life raft while they can go dine and dance in the hall with the rich people in the top level, it’s a hard sell.” | The

 ?? ?? MIKE Reynolds in one of his Earthships, which he calls ‘vessels’, in Taos, New Mexico, last month.
MIKE Reynolds in one of his Earthships, which he calls ‘vessels’, in Taos, New Mexico, last month.
 ?? ?? THE interior of an Earthship.
| All pictures: RAMSAY DE GIVE/THE Washington Post
THE interior of an Earthship. | All pictures: RAMSAY DE GIVE/THE Washington Post
 ?? ?? PART of an Earthship’s interior garden.
PART of an Earthship’s interior garden.
 ?? ?? THE exterior of an Earthship in Taos, New Mexico.
THE exterior of an Earthship in Taos, New Mexico.
 ?? ?? A RESIDENT tends plants in a garden inside an Earthship.
A RESIDENT tends plants in a garden inside an Earthship.
 ?? ?? CONSTRUCTI­ON of a new Earthship ‘Unity’ model in Taos last month.
CONSTRUCTI­ON of a new Earthship ‘Unity’ model in Taos last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa