An Earth-sheltered Modern Home Design
So often we’re inspired by nature and
the earth. Here’s a watercolor, pen, and pencil sketch from years ago where firm
principal Stephen M. Frey, AIA explored an earth-sheltered, nature-near home
design on a south-facing hillside site with a lifted and separated curving
green roof.
On an ideal site, the house would be a
two to three-bedroom, two-bath residence with an open and interconnected
kitchen, dining, and living space with three distinct zones with a great room
feel. It would be a net zero home, a residence that produces the same or more
energy than it consumes. We organized key bedrooms on the ends of the
rectangular home volume with view windows to the outside.
A nearby garage and or barn space
would supplement the home a short distance away. It could supply parking for
vehicles, workshop and craft areas, accessory dwelling units, and long-term
storage. To complete the integration with exterior design, a vegetable and
flower garden would be nearby as well as other landscaping would be installed.
Highlights of the Home Design and
Space Layout:
The living areas front the building
volume with easy exterior access to the continuous arbor-covered terrace and
ample views of the surroundings. In a later design step, we will study the
amount of glazing through energy modeling. Overglazing might cause overheating
of the house and having to size up the air-conditioning system at a higher cost
and energy use.
Biomorphic Structural System
The wooden glue-lam ribs of the home
are akin to bones that spring from the earth! The residence transitions from
the solidity and darkness found within the earth to the lightness of a forest
canopy along the continuous south-facing porch and terrace area. An overhead wood
timber frame arbor with solar control helps minimize summer glare while supplying
a place for vines to grow. Timber frame posts and supplemental beams would
abound in and out.
Solar Systems and Energy Independence
We imagine photovoltaic ground-mounted
solar trackers in a nearby solar orchard a short walk away. They would tie into
a nearby independent standalone timber frame structure that houses the whole
house battery system and inverters. The building would bring power safely to the
semi-underground home.
Daylighting, The Sun, and Nature Near
The south-facing window wall area and
short ends would connect to near and far views of the site and beyond. We would
tailor the home and site design to frame near and far views with window and
door openings.
Dynamic top lighting from skylights
and roof monitors activates interior spaces such as bathrooms, kitchens, and
internal areas. Overhead, top daylighting from triple-insulated prismatic
skylights lights these spaces during the day. At night, architectural LED
lighting will highlight the underside of the curving structure. This will bring
a day and night difference to the spaces within, activating them in unique ways
at each time of day.
The Building Enclosure and Performance
The building enclosure would be super-insulated,
suitable for the local climate and building traditions and regional preferences.
It would follow at a minimum (R5/R15/R20/R45/R80) for windows, below slabs,
walls in below-grade foundation conditions, walls above grade, and the ceiling as
recommended by Joe
Lstiburek, Ph.D., P. Eng. of Building Science Corporation. Windows of this home would have triple-insulated high-performance glazing
with low-e argon-filled units with thermal spacers set within fiberglass and
wood frames. Operable awning and casement windows would act in tandem with ceiling-mounted fans to circulate healthy fresh air in warmer times.
We envision the doors as made from fiberglass
frames with thermally broken edges. The nature near Green Roof could be
extensive or intensive depending on the client’s desires and structural
capabilities, cost, care preferences for the plantings, etc. It would help with
stormwater management capturing and filtering rainfall. Construction would follow
aggressive air-sealing standards to further reduce energy loads by minimizing
energy loss through cracks, corners, and joints.
The exterior rain screen siding could
be cement-plank, cedar, or metal siding such as metal panels, corrugated metal, or 12-inch ribbed siding. Depending on the preferences of the client, we could mix
and match artistically, connecting the home to the earth. Site-harvested flagstone,
if available, could enclose lower portions of the exterior walls and site
terracing.
Interior Systems, Mood, and Character
A radiant polished concrete slab with
decorative insets would supply heating. Air-air wall-mounted heat pumps would
supply cooling and supplemental heating.
We would choose simple and restrained
interior finishes, using local milled rough-sawn lumber or, if a client wants a
more modern interior design, we will use finished hardwood standing and running
trim with a contemporary design. Hand plastering or drywall would complement
the interior. The doors and kitchen would have simply rubbed bronze hardware
and pulls. Paints would be no or low-volatile organic compounds. (VOC).
Appliances would be high-performance Energy Star models to reduce energy use. We recommend all-electric, but it is
important to have backup generators onsite in case of power failures and
depletion of any home batteries. With Vermont’s increasingly warmer winters with
wet snows damaging power lines, it pays to be prepared for anything and to keep climate resiliency in mind when planning and constructing this home.
Lighting
High-performance LED lighting would
like the interior and exterior of this house and its site. We would specify a mix
of dimmable low-voltage architectural lighting emphasizing the ceiling and exposed
Glue-lam and timber-frame structure, as well as downlights, wall-washers decorative
pendant fixtures, and sconces. A thoroughly thought-out lighting design like
this would amplify the enjoyment of this home for years to come.
Local Materials
We envision focused areas that would
have locally sourced stone areas using Vermont slate, granite, or marble. One
could specify soapstone counters for the kitchen and bathroom vanity counters. Another
area to plan is to use solar color shades and blinds from nearby manufacturers
on the south and west-facing windows to control overheating and glare. We
advocate the use of local milled lumber as well.
Next Steps
In our design for this unbuilt Vermont net-zero home, we seek to capture nature’s beauty with our sustainable and artful living mindset. From the curved green roof to renewable energy, and interior and exterior site connections, every detail supports living in harmony with the environment.
If you’re intrigued, let’s discuss
adapting this design or aspects of it to create your dream home. Let’s design
and build a place and space that reflects your style and values while honoring
Vermont’s landscapes and sustainable living ethos. Contact us to begin this journey!
You can find us at Arocordis Design, our residential architecture firm's website. Our home studio is located in Montpelier, Vermont. Happy to connect.
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Are these plans available?
Beautiful looking drawings and very cool eco-groovy house to live in. One potential problem is that some of those structural components like the laminated Overhead beams and triple glazed windows are extremely expensive and I wonder what your cost per square foot would end up being. The other issue, at least where I live, is that we get a lot of rain and the ground remains wet and soggy for months at a time. You’re gonna need to do some serious waterproofing and or French drains on the backside of that house to keep from having water constantly pressing against the Earth wall interface.
Was this house ever built
I’ve always liked this idea especially since living in a daylight basement and seeing how much cooler it can be during our summers here in the Pacific Northwest…enough that we wear long sleeves down there in the summer. I’d suggest a holding tank for water coming off the back of the roof.
I saw something like your build from a train from Germany on the way to Switzerland but it was many houses with the roofs being the terrace for the home above it set into a hillside.
Love the idea.
We're plans ever done for this sketch?
Hello, the idea was never developed however very happy to work with a client on a house project like this. Just email us or follow us on Instagram @arocordis_design. You can also call 802-448-0056. Thanks, Steve
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