What's new
  • As of today ICMag has his own Discord server. In this Discord server you can chat, talk with eachother, listen to music, share stories and pictures...and much more. Join now and let's grow together! Join ICMag Discord here! More details in this thread here: here.

Walipini Construction ( UNDERGROUND green house )

yortbogey

To Have More ... Desire Less
Veteran
$300 Underground Greenhouse Grows Produce Year-Round, Even in Severe Climates


With staggering food prices and shortages looming, there’s no better time to grow your own produce. Sadly, most greenhouses are expensive to build and impractical to heat during cold, wintery conditions. Thankfully, a solution is found with the Walipini. Developed for South American mountainous regions over twenty years ago, it allows edibles to be grown year-round – even in the most inhospitable weather. As an added bonus, it’s also outrageously inexpensive to construct.


Known as a pit or underground greenhouse, the Walipini utilizes the advantages of passive solar heating along with earth sheltering properties. The structure makes use of thermal mass energy, creating a highly efficient and cost effective method for heating the interior. Regardless of where you live, produce can be grown year round with the Walipini. According to the creators at the Benson Institute:

“The Walipini, in simplest terms, is a rectangular hole in the ground 6′ to 8′ deep covered by plastic sheeting. The longest area of the rectangle faces the winter sun — to the north in the Southern Hemisphere and to the south in the Northern Hemisphere. A thick wall of rammed earth at the back of the building and a much lower wall at the front provide the needed angle for the plastic sheet roof. This roof seals the hole, provides an insulating airspace between the two layers of plastic (a sheet on the top and another on the bottom of the roof/poles) and allows the suns rays to penetrate creating a warm, stable environment for plant growth.”

The Institute continues with an explanation of how the earth acts like a battery, storing heat during the day while releasing it during cooler nighttime temperatures:

Energy and light from the sun enter the Walipini through the plastic covered roof and are reflected and absorbed throughout the underground structure. By using translucent material, plastic instead of glass, plant growth is improved as certain rays of the light spectrum that inhibit plant growth are filtered out. The sun’s rays provide both heat and light needed by plants. Heat is not only immediately provided as the light enters and heats the air, but heat is also stored as the mass of the entire building absorbs heat from the sun’s rays.

The estimated building cost (using volunteer labor) for a 20 x 74 foot Walipini in La Paz, Peru is between $250 – $300. Taking advantage of inexpensive materials like PVC pipes and ultraviolet (UV) protective plastic sheeting add to the savings.

A detailed do-it-yourself building manual can be found here and includes crucial instructions for ventilation, waterproofing and drainage.




http://www.treehugger.com/green-architecture/build-underground-greenhouse-garden-year-round.html

http://www.walipinigarden.com/




this changed my entire way of thinking / planning next year.....
 
Last edited:

iTarzan

Well-known member
Veteran
So people can just drain their in ground pools to use as a winter greenhouse. I don't see how they would have any chance of working in the northeast USA. I saw a special on tv where the guy made a similar thing with a wall of cinder blocks on the back long wall amd had barrels of water that held thermal energy during the night.

Interesting info Yort.
 

catbuds

Member
Pit houses are nothing NEW.... & they are used successfuly here on the east coast. Just because someone gave it a new name doesn't make the thing some bright new idea. The first florist I worked at after graduating hort in 1971 had one. Heated with a wood stove during winter months, any excess heat vented into the back work room. It had been built onto the back of the shop in the 1940's. Pit was 10' deep, butted against the back of the building, with a shed type roof like a lean to. I read the memoirs of some politician who grew up in a manor home which had an attached pit house that was built in the late 20s. They're great! Easier to heat & cool than above ground greenhouses, cheaper to build, but they're not new & I believe they got their start in Europe. They were in use before Darwins time, as somewhere in his writings, he mentions using one for some exotic jungle flora he brought home from one of his excursions.
-- The practice of using them died out a bit because of building permits. Once the zoning department got involved, they made it much more expensive than it needs to be. No involvement with above ground greenhouses as long as u put it on a concrete slab, or anything else not considered a foundation. Once u dig deep enough to break the frost line (18" deep here), then u're required by law to get permits & inspections. That's what made the pit house so rare most people forgot it ever existed at all.
-- Now if you don't have a nosey neighbor who calls the county on every move everybody makes, you're good to go... other wise, get your permits in order (wasted money to the county, paying them to put their nose in your business), & let the planning & zoning & permits dept re-design the whole thing for you. Because after all, it needs to be as expensive as they can make it in order to raise your property taxes! I say build your pit house! Just put it where it can't be seen & keep the nosey neighbors out of your business!
-- But back to the point.... they're not new, just an old thing re-invented! :)
 

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
I couldn't put my greenhouses on a concrete slab.. if I put a slab then it wasn't a temporary structure and they get involved..i miss my greenhouses...my friend in mass built an underground house ...had all kinds of issues with the state... they had a special session just to figure out how to screw him...in the end he won tho...he is dead now from cancer...
 

catbuds

Member
So people can just drain their in ground pools to use as a winter greenhouse. I don't see how they would have any chance of working in the northeast USA. I saw a special on tv where the guy made a similar thing with a wall of cinder blocks on the back long wall amd had barrels of water that held thermal energy during the night.


-- Think about it.... 4 walls of earth to insulate.... low profile above ground doesn't catch the frigid winter wind.
-- Much easier to heat than an unattatched, freestanding greenhouse. (ALL pit houses aren't attached, many are to conserve heat & block wind.)
 
Top