Vic Bishop, Staff
Waking Times
To keep up with average winter temperatures of 0°C (32°F) or below, Stockholm family employed a unique method of keeping the inside of their home warm, while lowering their heating bills and, at the same time, giving their home more exposure to the nature around it. They built a greenhouse around their house, a design better known as Naturhus, or Nature House.
Inspired by the creative genius of the late architect Bengt Warne, who designed the first Naturhus in the 1970’s, Charles Sacilotto took an old summer cottage in the Stockholm archipelago in Sweden and encased it within four millimeter glass.
“Living in a greenhouse gives architecture a fourth dimension, where time is represented by movements of naturally recycled endless flows of growth, sun, rain, wind and soil in plants, energy, air, water and earth. I call this NATURE-HOUSING.” ~ Bengt Warne
Photo credit: myscienceacademy.org
Sacilotto and his wife Marie Granmar now live in a home that they claim has upstairs temperatures of 15 to 20°C (59°F to 68°F), even when outside temperatures reach -2°C (28.4°F). There is plenty of room around the actual house for a wrap around garden since the footprint of the greenhouse is nearly double that of the house. The Mediterranean-like climate that results from the Nature House design allows the couple to grow vegetables not commonly grown in Sweden, including figs and tomatoes.
Photo credit: myscienceacademy.org
In addition to plenty of produce-growing space, the family now enjoys a large glass-covered terrace that has replaced the roof. Sacilotto and Granmar removed the roof because it was no longer needed. They now enjoy the space for sunbathing, reading and playing with their son.
Photo credit: myscienceacademy.org
Another innovative technique employed at the Stockholm Naturhus is a sewage system that uses a urine-separating toilet, centrifuges, cisterns, grow beds, and garden ponds to filter toilet water and compost the remains.
Photo credit: myscienceacademy.org
Although the family must still use indoor heaters to warm the home during the most frigid days of winter, choosing this type of architecture design has given the family an opportunity to enjoy home life while experiencing a closer connection to the natural environment around them.
“It’s not just to use the nature, the sun and the water, but… it’s all a philosophy of life, to live in another world, in fact.” ~ Charles Sacilotto
Below is a video that will take you on a tour of the Sacilotto-Granmar home:
Read more articles from Vic Bishop.
Greenhouse home design has the potential to reduce home energy bills as much as 50 percent. Below are a few other images of other Nature House builds that may inspire you to change your perception of what a home might look like.
Photo credit: http://www.ecorelief.se/
Photo credit: http://www.ecorelief.se/
Photo credit: http://bengtwarne.malwa.nu/
Photo credit: http://bengtwarne.malwa.nu/
About the Author
Vic Bishop is a staff writer for Waking Times.
This article (Ingenious Nature House Redefines the Meaning of Living Connected to Nature) was originally created and published by Waking Times and is published here under a Creative Commons license with attribution to Vic Bishop and WakingTimes.com. It may be re-posted freely with proper attribution, author bio, and this copyright statement. Please contact [email protected] for more info.
Sources:
– http://myscienceacademy.org/2015/11/15/family-wraps-their-home-in-a-greenhouse-to-protect-it-from-the-cold/
– https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=30ghnDOFbNQ
~~ Help Waking Times to raise the vibration by sharing this article with friends and family…