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Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,131
Registered: ‎03-11-2010

BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

"BYU students have designed, engineered and built a truly one-of-a-kind, zero-energy, sustainable, transportable, affordable home — right on campus. Nicknamed the “Triple Dome Home” because it consists of three interconnected monolithic concrete domes, the two-bedroom, two-bathroom home is (temporarily) nestled in a plot of land behind BYU’s Snell Building.

 

The zero-energy, 850-square-foot house was built completely by students as part of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon. It is designed to reduce its carbon footprint, decrease water consumption and maintain a constant temperature through cold winters and hot summers almost effortlessly.

 

To top it off, the home is transportable and can be taken anywhere a crane can be placed. In fact, the home will be uprooted and moved to California in the fall to be sold.

 

“Our goal was to build a home entirely outside the traditional status quo,” said student Ally Atchley. “It’s clear that no home like this is readily available in the market today.” A few unique engineering approaches to the Triple Dome Home include using fiberglass instead of rebar as the primary material to reinforce the concrete structure; applying a PVC membrane to the entire exterior of the walls to create an insulating, water-proof envelope; and berming the home with soil, rocks and plants covering portions of the exterior walls.

 

The home is powered by 34 double-sided solar panels built into a carport and a pergola directly adjacent to the structure. Because of its concrete dome structure, the home is windproof, fireproof and resistant to extreme temperatures. It also has triple-paned windows for added energy efficiency. The project has stretched the skills, both physical and mental, of the more than 20 students involved in the design, engineering and construction."

 

 

Image: Looking Down at the Triple Dome Home - Monolithic Dome Institute

 

 

Image: Floor plan of the Triple Dome Home - Monolithic Dome Institute

 

 

BYU Students Construct Solar-Powered Concrete House on Campus - Provo ...

 

BYU Students Construct Solar-Powered Concrete House on Campus - Provo ...

 

Solar Success: How the Triple Dome Became a Model for Clean Energy ...

 

The Triple Dome Home—A Brigham Young University Project - Monolithic ...

 

 

BYU team who built the home.

BYU solar decathlon team builds energy-efficient 'Triple Dome Home ...

 

There is a YouTube video of the home.

Channel is  Brigham Young University.

Title of video is No Place Like Dome: BYU Students Design and Build Futuristic Home.

Info I posted is from the YouTube channel.

Valued Contributor
Posts: 774
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

Thank you for posting this interesting article @Iwantcoffee . Brigham Young University is an outstanding university. I confess I'm a little biased because that's my alma mater, lol.

 

What a neat home though!

Honored Contributor
Posts: 10,829
Registered: ‎06-14-2010

Re: BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

Wonderful!  As a life long environmentalist I am always in favor of what is being done to protect our health and well being.  I applaud these students for this energy saving project and the thought, time and effort put into it.  The Dome Home may not be for everyone but it is good to know there are those people out there who give us options which are good for the environment.  Uplifting post for me, thanks!!!!

Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,784
Registered: ‎08-01-2019

Re: BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

That is amazing!  Thanks for posting!

Honored Contributor
Posts: 44,763
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

How cool is that?

 

Go Cougars!

~My philosophy: Dogs are God's most perfect creatures. Angels, here on Earth, who teach us to be better human beings.~
Honored Contributor
Posts: 20,493
Registered: ‎11-08-2014

Re: BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

@Iwantcoffee ,  Good ol' American ingenuity.  What great kids! 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 23,691
Registered: ‎03-13-2010

Re: BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

U.S. Geodesic Dome at Expo '67 World Fair, Montreal, Canada

 

Montreal Biosphere: The Iconic Geodesic Dome by Buckminster Fuller – Arcace

♥Surface of the Sun♥
Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,684
Registered: ‎01-25-2023

Re: BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

WOW, @Iwantcoffee great insight and info!

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(especially cats!)
Honored Contributor
Posts: 27,283
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

"Transportable" is debatable. I mean, you can move anything if you want to, but it wouldn't be easy by any stretch. Huge structures have been moved, including the Newark International Airport Building (7,400 tons), but just because you can move something, doesn't mean it would be easy, or qualify as "transportable." You could move the Empire State Building if you wanted to, but I wouldn't call it "transportable." 

 

I've been a fan of shipping container emergency housing for disasters. Outfit each shipping container with a small kitchen area, sleeping quarters, and whatnot. Maybe solar panels. Fill a ship with them and have them ready to go to any area that suffers catastrophic losses. (Hurricanes/cyclones, floods, tsunamis, fires, etc.) Either make some sort of all-terrain mover or use large helicopters to move them from the ship to the areas where they're needed. Some ships can hold up to 20,000 twenty-foot-long shipping containers. That could be a lot of emergency housing ready to deploy into an area within days. Once the emergency was over, recover them, re-equip them, and have them ready for the next issue. Each one could have water/food pre-stocked, and even some basic medical supplies.

Fly!!! Eagles!!! Fly!!!
Respected Contributor
Posts: 4,756
Registered: ‎03-11-2010

Re: BYU Students Design and Build Dome Home

Wonder what the cost was?  Great engineering.