Earthship Biotecture for New Orleans PDF Print E-mail
Written by Earthship Biotecture   

Earthship Biotecture for New Orleans
The mission:

  • Build a fully sustainable / off grid 3 bedroom demonstration earthship home in six weeks
  • Function as a learning center for 18 months
  • Teach local political & building officials how to build earthships in New Orleans
  • Give the earthship home to a local family who lost their home to Hurricane Katrina

What is an Earthship and What is Earthship Biotecture?

  • A sustainable housing method called Earthship Biotecture
  • Developed by Michael Reynolds over the last 37 years
  • Earthships provide modern, expected amenities, independent of municipal utilities.

 

 

 

 

 

earthship home "features"

  • heat and cool themselves naturally via
  • solar / thermal dynamics
  • collect their own power from the sun and wind
  • harvest their own water from rain and snow melt
  • contain and treat all sewage on site
  • produce food in significant quantities
  • utilizes recycled materials
Earthship Biotecture
directly addresses
the local and global issues
of our time.

to New Orleans

  • 10 of the world’s most experienced Earthship builders travel to New Orleans
  • Complete the building in six weeks with 20 local interns
  • Locals learn hands-on, how to continue to build earthships in New Orleans

demonstration
“don’t just GIVE the people a fish, TEACH the people how to fish”

  • Local interns learn how to build earthships for New Orleans
  • Local building officials, health official, politicians, residents, school children, contractors, plumbers, electricians, etc. will tour the finished building
  • They will attend lectures, presentations, watch videos, purchase educational material, etc.

This transfer of knowledge will influence the ongoing rebuilding effort in a more sustainable, logical and practical way. It will help the city of New Orleans be better equipped and prepared to deal with the next massive hurricane.

the bottom line
environmentally responsible and economically viable

  • The full project, including staging, travel, crew, accommodations, and construction expenses will cost approximately $280k.
  • Funding will come from donations, sponsors and general fundraising with the balance coming from Earthship Biotecture.
  • During the 18 months of operation as a learning center / demo home, this $280k will be fully recovered - at which point the Earthship will be given away to a local New Orleans family in need.

a solid track record
demonstration | disaster relief: worldwide, in any climate

get involved

  • Contribute to the Earthship New Orleans fund
  • Sponsor the Earthship New Orleans project
  • Volunteer your time: construction, operations, raise awareness online

To get involved, give us a call at 505.751.0462.

We appreciate your time and attention. The people of New Orleans still need our help!!!

It is our belief that people who can help have the greatest responsibility to help, this is our obligation to humanity. We hope you can contribute to this project.

  click here to download the Earthship Biotecture for New Orleans pdf file
  call us at 505-751-0462 or send an email to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it '; document.write( '' ); document.write( addy_text66288 ); document.write( '<\/a>' ); //-->\n This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Earthship Biotecture creates buildings that...
heat and cool themselves naturally via solar/thermal dynamics
collect their own power from the sun and wind
harvest their own water from rain and snow melt
contain and treat their own sewage on site
produce food in significant quantities
utilize materials that
are byproducts of modern society
like cans, bottles and tires

 

Comments
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RhondaRainbow  - Re: Earthship Biotecture for New Orleans   |64.12.117.xxx |2007-09-26 22:46:55
New Orleans is my home town; I grew up there, and my heart will always be there.
My mother and her sisters moved to St. Bernard Parish, just east of New
Orleans, when they bought their first homes. As our parents grew older, my
generation moved to St. Bernard Parish to be near them. This is where I, and
most of my family, lived when Hurricane Katrina hit. Now, two years after the
storm, I still see many dead neighborhoods. And those that are coming back often
use the same bad building methods that failed them during the storm. I'm looking
forward to Earthship Biotecture coming to the area to show us a better way to
build. We get enough sunshine and rain here to utilize solar energy and water
harvesting, yet neither has ever been promoted as an alternative in Louisiana. I
hope that Earthship Biotecture will change that, and will open our minds and our
eyes to what could be. ~ Rhonda
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