Passive Solar Home with Soil Heat Storage

Josh built this very unique passive solar home in Missouri. The house incorporates the usual south glazing to gather solar heat and good insulation to reduce heating requirements.  But, it also has a unique heat storage capability using the soil under the main floor.  And, a unique cooling system that makes use of the same soil heat store.

Passive solar home with heat storage

The south face of Josh's solar home.


Thanks very much to Josh for taking the time to provide the details on this unique design.




The most unique feature of the house is that it stores excess solar heat during the daytime in a two foot thick soil bank below the floor slab.  This will allow Josh to reduce the overheating problem that passive solar homes sometimes have during the daytime, and to store heat in the soil that can then be used overnight, or even to cover heating needs for some days with no sun.

The house is well insulated using ICF (Insulated Concrete Forms) for the main part of the house, rigid polyiso for the roof, and cellulose for other parts. 

The house also has pex piping embedded in the underfloor heat store, and Josh plans to pipe 62F well water through the piping to cool the heat storage and provide "coolth" for cooling the house in the summer.  A very nice dual usage of the heat store.

soil heat storage ducting

Ducts to distribute solar heat to the below floor heat store.


pex piping in floor

Pex tubing in floor for radiant heating (and for well water cooling in summer).

This pdf provides all the details on the Josh's design (and life) philosophy and construction...

Josh promises an update on the performance of the house once he has lived in the house for a while.

2024 Update from Josh:

Five year update.  

The passive solar house continues to work admirably well.  We were first able to occupy the house on the night of December 23 2018, which is good, because it was getting a bit down in the winter for RV living.  There were plenty of details to be finished up over the next several years, and of course my progress was much slower than my wife would have appreciated.  

The rough order of projects was:

Upstairs railings so upstairs bedrooms could be used without small children attempting skydiving from the upstairs loft. 

Countertops in the kitchen, no more plywood

Flooring in upstairs rooms

Various exterior work

A garden (Yay!!)

A pump house building at the well head to keep the water (mostly) from freezing during cold spells.  Unfortunately the occasional water freeze up still occurs, including the cold water to the kitchen sink due to a poorly planned water line routing near the northwest band board of the first floor ceiling.  I had thought there would be enough insulation for this to not be a problem, but there is not.  The water line is PEX though, so no harm really, just annoying.

A front porch

A second garden (one that doesn’t flash flood during a heavy summer thunderstorm)

Exterior siding.

Lots of fence building, pretty much a permanent project here on the farm.

Addition of a small wood fired stove (cubic mini stove) which successfully heats the house on about ¼ of a cord of wood per year

Establishment of a cattle herd (thanks COVID for helping me talk the wife into this becoming a priority) and a chicken flock.

Re-establishment of chicken flock after various lessons to children about the importance of closing the coop door at night, and location of various marauding neighbor dogs.

Various baseboard, door and window trim (this was somewhat delayed while awaiting material delivery from a family member) and painting

A “tarp barn” of billboard vinyl over a greenhouse frame, and consolidation of various building materials under cover of weather.

 

Still Left: (hopefully all complete by spring of 2024):

Finish work on stair trim

Various storage area upgrades

Some exterior trim and siding

A greenhouse

 

Future major projects include a permanent barn, and finally the “big” house on the bluff that I originally sold my wife on.

 

Now, on to the technical details!

The house, as mentioned, continues to perform well.  Most years we are into December before there is any need to add any additional heat to the house.  2023 was a banner year as a cool, and less humid late spring saw us go almost to July before installing any air conditioners in windows (we use two 5000BTU units in the upstairs), we are experimenting with the cooling system, but still I have never installed ducting to  push air through the floor tubes.  Circulating cold water through the floor mass does chill the mass, so this year I plan to work out the ducting and complete that experiment.  In addition, a warm fall and early winter saw us go into 2024 before the 2023 heating season actually began.  Mostly this year we have just burned lumber scraps left from trim work, I have not cut any firewood.  We have used the radiant heating loop for a couple weeks during a particularly cold spell.  I have found that during 0F overnights we need no additional heating as long as there is full sun during the day the house will be about 65F in the morning.  That’s a touch cool for comfort, but many people set their thermostat to that level or below for energy savings especially in more northern climates.  Also, if the floor mass is all the way warmed up, ~80F then the house will stay warm for several days straight with temperatures outside of roughly 40 during the day and 20 at night with no additional solar gain in that time.  This means we have little to fear from even a protracted power outage.  Most importantly, my wife has learned that she loves radiant heated floors at least as much as anyone else I have ever heard review the idea.  They are very comfortable.

 

I’m not sure if I mentioned any dollar amounts, but the build cost about 70K, with maybe 5K more into additional projects since the main initial build was completed.  This includes 12K for framing labor, 6k for concrete placement labor, 2k for drywall hanging, and 3k for drywall finishing labor.  We also spent roughly 4-5k total on various earthmoving.  If I had had the time, and inclination I could then have saved maybe 15-20k more on various labor costs.  This is for a four bedroom, 2 bath home that houses a family of 7 with minimal ongoing energy expenditures.  

Someone ought to inform HUD and the DOE that such performance is possible……

Best Regards,

Joshua Brueggen



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