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- cross-posted to:
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/22438897
Yo I just saw a real estate listing on one of the islands near Vancouver Island for one of these. If it wasn’t a million dollars and isolated from pretty much everything, I would definitely be tempted!
Wow you weren’t kidding, it’s very isolated. It would be cool to see it in person but that’s very far from everything.
I thought this was funny
Excellent access to freeways and major arteries, with a vast amount of parking nearby.
The main pictured on looks pretty goofy, especially because of the bright green, but this sent me down a youtube rabbit hole of seeing a bunch of reallymawesome house tours.
Side note: I find ‘new build ecofriendly’ architecture liks this awesome, but wonder a lot about adapting existing homes which is surely the most environmentally friendly option. If you were to go all out on making an existing home solarpunk, what would that look like?
Inspiration for making a solar-punk home from a regular residential building: https://slrpnk.net/post/12320109
I suspect similar to what we’re already seeing in terms of “tuning kits” (solar thermic energy kits, decentralized power kits, new insulation…)
The main direction for improvements from an SP perspective would probably be in the realms of
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increased efficiency of those kits
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decreased production and maintenance requirements for those kits
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They look very cool indeed. Tailoring the design to harnes naturally available energy sources instead of relying on the grid is great. Also increasing sustainability by making it easy to service makes sense. The only thing I fear is that if everybody wants to live in a single story home, the world will be plastered with housing and there will be no more agricultural land left to produce food.
Also this https://slrpnk.net/comment/12346938
We must achieve sustainability as a society not as individuals. And while the latter is our main leverage it shouldn’t actively undermine the former
It’s been a while since I’ve been reminded Teletubbies exist.
I think they’re pretty interesting, but they have so much manual labor involved :/
Do you mean in construction or in daily living?
In construction
Far less work than a conventional house - it’s just that for the latter, there’s a ready-made supply of specialists, so you can just replace the work cost with money.
That’s almost a selling point, albeit a painful one. You can build these for cheaper than a stick frame, if you have the physicality and time to do so. Otherwise its going to pricier.
Specialization of labor is how we can accomplish what we have as a society.