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[[File:HCEarthship3.jpg|500px|Haiti Communitere earthship living space front door.|thumb]]
[[File: HCEarthship3.jpg|thumb]]
==Overview==


<gallery widths=200>
{{Project data
File:HCEarthship.jpg|
| status = Deployed
File:HCEarthship2.jpg|
| instance-of = Ecoladrillo, Earthship
File:HCEarthship26.JPG|
| location = Haiti
File:HCEarthship25.JPG|
}}
File:HCEarthship8.jpg|
 
File:HCEarthship10.jpg|
The [[earthship]] living space was built at [[Haiti Communitere]] as a response to the 2010 earthquake. It serves as a demonstration for how homes can be built from waste material like tires, plastic bottles, and rubble from the earthquake. The base of the earthship is made with tires stacked seven high within the walls. Above the tires are the plastic bottle walls. The dome roof was made with steel bars along with with shredded cardboard and styrofoam in rice bags and plastic bags for insulation. The earthship incorporates concepts like temperature regulation, solar energy, sewage treatment, upcycled materials, water harvesting, and food production. A solar panel charges a battery, which provides the necessary energy for the earthship living space. The other mentioned concepts are discussed under the images in the gallery. For an animated explanation of the process please see the '''[[#Videos]]''' below. The total project cost was about USD$4000, and it took around 20 people 10 days to construct the entire structure with pre-prepared materials. The structure used about 10,000 plastic bottles, and just under 100 tires that would have otherwise remained in the waste stream.
File:HCEarthship11.jpg|
 
File:HCEarthship13.jpg|
== Gallery ==
File:HCEarthship14.jpg|
 
File:HCEarthship16.jpg|
<gallery widths="200">
File:HCEarthship18.JPG|
File:HCEarthship11.jpg|The plastic water bottles create a stunning view on the inside of the earthship.
File:HCEarthship23.JPG|
File:HCEarthship14.jpg|The earthship design incorporates passive rainwater catchment. All of the water that falls on the roof of the main room, the archway, or the restroom is guided to a water storage tank by the contours of the roof. That water can then be collected from a spigot and be used for toilet flushing, showering, or any other necessary task.
File:HCEarthship24.JPG|
File:HCEarthship16.jpg|If the water tank fills up it overflows out a bamboo pipe into a garden.
File:HCEarthship18.JPG|An airway in the roof allows for hot air to escape upwards. This is an important feature in Haiti's hot climate.
File:HCEarthship23.JPG|A shower room for taking bucket showers with the collected rainwater. The water used in the shower is captured by an underground basin, and overflows into a greywater earthship garden basin.
File:HCEarthship24.JPG|The toilet is flushed with water from the shower greywater basin. The flushed water enters a blackwater tank and overflows into a different garden basin where it provides nutrients and water to plants. If that basin fills there is a third garden bed that serves as an overflow basin for the blackwater.
File:HCEarthship25.JPG|The gardens fed by the grey and black water are in front of the earthship archway.
</gallery>
</gallery>


==Videos==
== Videos ==
Here's a view of the wall from inside the Earthship structure. The wind blowing through the trees outside causes the light from the bottles to flicker.  
 
{{#widget:YouTube|id=3uAb4n0uu8k}}
The first video explains the design and some of the construction process for the earthship structure. The second video provides a view of the wall from inside the Earthship structure. The wind blowing through the trees outside causes the light to flicker through the bottles.
 
{{Grid
| content = {{Video
| video = 6NqIg0m6vW8
}}
 
{{Video
| video = 3uAb4n0uu8k
}}
 
}}
 
{{Page data
| keywords = Travel internships, Alternative building, Ecoladrillo, Rainwater, Food production, Water conservation, Urban agriculture
| sdg = SDG11 Sustainable cities and communities
| organizations = Haiti Communitere
}}


[[Category:Travel internships]]
[[Category:Travel internships]]
[[Category:Haiti]]
[[Category:Alternative building]]
[[Category:Alternative building]]
[[Category:Ecoladrillo]]
[[Category:Ecoladrillo]]
[[Category:Rainwater]]
[[Category:Food production]]
[[Category:Water conservation]]
[[Category:Urban agriculture]]

Latest revision as of 18:22, 29 January 2024

HCEarthship3.jpg
FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Project data
Location Haiti
Status Deployed
Instance of Ecoladrillo
Earthship
OKH Manifest Download

The earthship living space was built at Haiti Communitere as a response to the 2010 earthquake. It serves as a demonstration for how homes can be built from waste material like tires, plastic bottles, and rubble from the earthquake. The base of the earthship is made with tires stacked seven high within the walls. Above the tires are the plastic bottle walls. The dome roof was made with steel bars along with with shredded cardboard and styrofoam in rice bags and plastic bags for insulation. The earthship incorporates concepts like temperature regulation, solar energy, sewage treatment, upcycled materials, water harvesting, and food production. A solar panel charges a battery, which provides the necessary energy for the earthship living space. The other mentioned concepts are discussed under the images in the gallery. For an animated explanation of the process please see the #Videos below. The total project cost was about USD$4000, and it took around 20 people 10 days to construct the entire structure with pre-prepared materials. The structure used about 10,000 plastic bottles, and just under 100 tires that would have otherwise remained in the waste stream.

Gallery[edit | edit source]

Videos[edit | edit source]

The first video explains the design and some of the construction process for the earthship structure. The second video provides a view of the wall from inside the Earthship structure. The wind blowing through the trees outside causes the light to flicker through the bottles.

mqdefault.jpgYouTube_icon.svg
mqdefault.jpgYouTube_icon.svg
FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Page data
Keywords travel internships, alternative building, ecoladrillo, rainwater, food production, water conservation, urban agriculture
SDG SDG11 Sustainable cities and communities
Authors Dominick Triola, Justine Cook
License CC-BY-SA-3.0
Organizations Haiti Communitere
Language English (en)
Translations Spanish
Related 1 subpages, 10 pages link here
Impact 695 page views
Created October 20, 2014 by Justine Cook
Modified January 29, 2024 by Felipe Schenone
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