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The Field Lab – Extremely Sustainable Homestead

by Michael Janzen on June 8, 2009

The Field Lab, also known as the Southwest Texas Alternative Energy And Sustainable Living Field Laboratory, is the 40-acre desert homestead of John Wells. John had been living in upstate New York for years but had a bit of awakening, like many of us, and decided to make his sustainable homestead dreams a reality. After purchasing his land in October 2007 he built this little house in 8 days for $1,600. It was habitable but needed a little detail work which he completed in about 5 months and for another $800.

the-field-lab-tiny-house

John has created what many of us imagine, albeit in a remote and rugged territory. His energy needs are very low and all his electricity comes from a small photovoltaic solar array. His water rains down from the sky and is collected from his tiny roof and stored in a water tank. The desert gets hot and he’s designed a small swamp cooler that keeps his tiny house at 80-degrees fahrenheit even on the hottest days. His toilet is a sawdust toilet. Continue reading for more photos and a link to his website.

the-field-lab-rain-water-tank

Above is John’s rain water collection system. It can collect 140 gallons of water for every inch of rainfall. He’s also working to tap a nearby arroyo to capture some addition water when it rains, much like the Anasazi did over a millenia ago. He’s also in the middle of building a 1,600 square foot greenhouse out of shipping containers. When it is complete it will add significantly to his rain water harvesting efforts.

Below is his homemade swamp (evaporative) cooler. It draws very little electricity but keeps his home cool all summer long.

the-field-lab-swamp-cooler

the-field-lab-lovable-loo

If you’ve ever been curious to see the Jenkins humanure composting toilet in action, here it is summarized in two photos. Above is the toilet and it’s simply a bucket and lid with sawdust layered between the contributions. When the bucket gets full you wait a little and then compost it. Below is the compost pile.

At first most people are a bit surprised at the simplicity of this method of recycling human waste; but it begins to make more sense when you consider it uses no water and after sufficient time cooking the compost can be used as fertilizer.  

the-field-lab-humanure-compost

John has built a great website filled with tons of information about his homestead. He also has a blogs on his progress and learning regularly. If you’re like me and  dreams of building an off-the-grid homestead, John is definitely a guy to learn from. Photo credit John Wells.

Also thanks to Tim for sending me a link to this website, great find Tim!

View Comments to “The Field Lab – Extremely Sustainable Homestead”

  1. [...] John Wells no está aislado, al contrario, mantiene un blog donde cuenta su día a día con otras personas involucradas en este proyecto, y ayuda a otros a conseguir este sueño de sostenibilidad, de ser autosuficiente al más puro estilo de “hágalo usted mismo“. Además, John también está  inmerso en la construcción de una vivienda verde de 144m2 hecha con contenedores de carga, pero esa es otra historia. Visto en Tiny House Design. [...]

  2. [...] The Field Lab – Extremely Sustainable Homestead. The Field Lab, also known as the Southwest Texas Alternative Energy And Sustainable Living Field Laboratory, is a 40-acre desert homestead where John Wells decided to make his sustainable homestead dreams a reality. After purchasing his land 2 years ago, he built this little house in 8 days for $1,600. It was habitable but needed a little detail work which he completed in about 5 months and for another $800. [...]

  3. [...] The Field Lab, also known as the Southwest Texas Alternative Energy And Sustainable Living Field Laboratory, is the 40-acre desert homestead of John Wells. John had been living in upstate New York for years but had a bit of awakening, like many of us, and decided to make his sustainable homestead dreams a reality. After purchasing his land in October 2007 he built this little house in 8 days for $1,600. It was habitable but needed a little detail work which he completed in about 5 months and for another $800. Continue Reading… [...]

  4. [...] so much out of so little and makes a frugal man look extravagant. Be sure to read my first post on John’s tiny house and then dig into all the great stuff he’s posted [...]

  5. [...] way people like John Wells at The Field Lab are able to setup extreme off-the-grid homesteads with all the simple sustainable technologies is [...]

  6. [...] Also see the solar powered evaporative cooler John Wells built at The Field Lab. [...]

  7. Yogie says:

    Just wanted to wish you a Happy New year . Great job on your place . looking good :)

  8. Marc Honey says:

    So why in the world aren’t we mass producing something along these lines out of recycled plastics, old used car tires, etc. and setting up neighborhoods of them down in Haiti. With minimal solar and wind power, these type units could solve a myriad of problems in Haiti and go a LONG way to providing a research and development base to improve on the concept. Finance them with “foriegn aid”, emergency relief, green jobs development money, new/emerging technology money, prvt. funding like Gates Foundation.

  9. Joe Hutto says:

    I love it seen you on rfdtv 3/28/10 it was great how do you hook all the harbor freight solar panels up. have some of my own. would you be so kind to share it with me thanks Joe H.

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