Tour of the Earthship (Brighton)

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earthshipbrighton1510053Earthships are cutting edge ‘green’ buildings, constructed using waste car tyres and other recycled materials. They use the planets natural systems to provide all utilities – using the sun’s energy and rain to provide heat, power and water. They are buildings that heat and cool themselves, harvest their own water and use plants to treat their waste.

Earthships enjoy the weather, regardless of season. If it’s raining they catch free water, if it’s windy they generate free power and if it’s sunny they are capturing free heat and electricity. Apart from using all the resources immediately around them they also employ extensive energy efficiency and water conservation measures, ensuring that the rainwater and renewable energy they harvest goes as far as possible.

 

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When visiting the Earthship we strongly encourage using the Big Lemon Bus Company. Its an alternative to using diesel run buses, the bus is run on 100% recycled cooking oil this is not only an easy way to be green it also makes a fun and educational way to begin and finish the day.

A discount is available if you mention the Earthship.

www.thebiglemon.com 

3 Comments

3 Responses

  1. Jane Mconald Eastbourne Home Educators Rewiew  •  August 19, 2009 @5:26 pm

    We then spent a wonderful few hours with Phil, touring the Earthship and finding out how it had been built by volunteers who have an interest in sustainable living and in caring tenderly for our Earth.

    We viewed an open section of the wall of the house, which has been constructed using old tyres and bottles for building materials. We saw flooring made from re-claimed tiles; a re-cycled kitchen sink; clever lighting that uses natural sunlight focused in a way to illuminate the interior rooms brightly; screens made using the ends of coloured glass bottles to give both light and privacy inside the Earthship. We learned how rainwater is collected from the roof, which also boasts a large collection of solar panels; how waste water is filtered and re-used. We saw that there is a small wind turbine outside and also a developing vegetable garden to further enhance sustainable living. The south-facing glass suntrap at the front of the Earthship is so well served by sun that a banana tree grows there in full splendour, in addition to many other useful plants.

    Inside, in the main living room of the Earthship, the children engaged in a workshop with Phil, seeing and handling many useful items made from precious resources normally discarded as rubbish. They spent part of this session constructing wallets from tetrapacks, again thinking about how they might use items we view as “rubbish” in ways that may be useful to us.

    Finally, the children had a talk from an organic gardener, Doug, who has an allotment near to the Earthship. Doug grows organic herbs for local Brighton restaurants and explained to the children how he uses natural methods to control pests of all kinds, including ladybirds to keep aphid numbers in check and Goldie the ferret to deal with any explosion in the local rabbit population. Doug manages to harvest a good crop using Nature’s controls and without any harmful effects on the local ecology. The long journey to see the Earthship was worth every mile. The children were fascinated by the Earthship and enjoyed the afternoon’s learning. They even helped Doug to plant some herbs before heading back to Brighton. The grand finale of the day was a few hours on the beach – a great treat for those of us who live in Bedford, which is an awfully long way from sea and sand.

  2. Emma Fooks Westdene Primary School Brighton  •  November 5, 2009 @5:23 pm

    Thank you so much. The children were buzzing with excitement on our return about bottle walls wind turbines and allotments!

  3. Jo Slagter Somerhill Junior School Eco co-ordinator  •  February 10, 2010 @8:01 pm

    Thank you so much for today. The kids reported back very positively to their classes and were very proud of their wallets. I think everyone was suitably impressed by the Earthship ideal and we’re looking forward to telling the whole school about it in our energy assembly and asking the right questions about our new sustainable school building.
    We have a lot to think about in school now and I know what they learned today will give them a confident start to making an energy plan and putting it into action.

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