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    HomeGreen InfrastructureGreen BuildingFrom Ruin to Regenerative Homestead – Natural Building Blog

    From Ruin to Regenerative Homestead – Natural Building Blog

    After purchasing a ruin in a hilltop hamlet in the Spanish Pyrenees, Emmanuel Pauwels created a home in close harmony with the elements by first spending an entire year observing the patterns of the wind, sun, and rain. Today, the sun provides for passive heating of the home via south-facing windows, but also an antechamber devoted toward capturing the sun’s warmth and distributing it through the home. In summer, the wind is funneled through the home for passive cooling.

    Using a system of gutters and a first flush system for cleaning the rooftop water, the home captures, consumes, and returns 80,000 liters of rainwater to the garden every year. The gravity-flow composting toilets (on all floors) use a source separation system so the urine can remain sterile and be diverted to the garden.

    Even the swimming pool is a refuge for the local flora and fauna. Pauwels created an…

    Read full article originally published on naturalbuildingblog.com

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