Depending on how it’s built and insulated, it might be much cheaper to heat and cool, though.
Very unusual unfinished, unpermitted concrete bermed home with unpermitted septic system and no power on 4.97 secluded, wooded acres. Individual well. 4-1,000 in ground propane tanks, 500 gal water storage tank. Used to be powered by a solar system & a generator, both of which were stolen (and other equipment) but electric nearby. Owner was working on a self-sufficient home but passed during construction having spent over $400K on the project.
They were building a bunker.
but passed during construction having spent over $400K on the project.
A boomer building a bunker.
You can usually delete the tracking stuff after the question mark in the link
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Oh interesting thank you for the info, I was dealing with that today while trying to share an article it had a short id number I deleted but then it broke the link. Also it seems like tiktok generates a custom tracking link each time that shows the person who shared it with you and I haven’t found a way to edit the link to get rid of that
Getting permitted may be about impossible, but there’s a lot going on here. On a creek, near a lake, not too far outside a major city, I dig it. And 5 acres is nothing to sneeze at. I’ve got half that in Florida Swamp and still haven’t explored it all after 4 years.
replace that roof with native plants and you have solarpunk
It was definitely a boomers bunker. A capitalist stronghold being usurped by the Solarpunks is short-story worthy.
The whole point of these types of places is to save on heat/cooling.
I can see the value in that, basically nature’s insulation - though I’m not an architect nor an engineer, but that looks like a flat roof - so would overgrown grass or sodden soil put some crazy weight and pressure on the structure?