- Beyond Sustainability - The Case for Regenerative Design
- Understanding Place - Climate, Site, and Solar Geometry
- The Six Integrated Systems - An Overview
- Building with the Earth—Natural Materials
- Passive Solar Design - Heating and Cooling Without Machines
- Off-Grid Energy Systems - Power from the Sun
- Water - Catching, Storing, and Cycling
- Liquid Waste Treatment - Botanical Systems
- Food Systems—Buildings That Feed
- Community Design - Scaling Up
- The Integrated Design Process
- Appendix A: Glossary of Key Terms
- Appendix B: The Pangea Textbook Series
- Appendix C: Key Design Principles at a Glance
- The Regenerative Community Vision
- Site Assessment and Land Reading
- Land Use Law and Legal Frameworks
- Master Planning for Regenerative Communities
- Infrastructure Systems Integration
- Housing Typologies and Density Design
- Community Governance Structures
- Economic Models for Community Development
- Phased Development Strategy
- Community Resilience and Long-Term Stewardship
- Appendix A: Legal Entity Comparison Chart
- Appendix B: Community Design Checklist
- Appendix C: Glossary of Community Development Terms
The simplest definition of a passive solar building is one that manages its own temperature without mechanical equipment, using only the architectural properties of its form, materials, and orientation. Heating in winter comes from the sun, stored in thermal mass and insulated within the building envelope. Cooling in summer comes from shading, ventilation, and the night-sky radiation and evaporation that characterize arid climates. No boiler, no air conditioner, no utility bill for heating or cooling.
This is not a fantasy. Passive solar buildings that maintain comfortable temperatures year-round without any mechanical heating or cooling have been built in climates ranging from the New Mexico high desert to the Norwegian mountains. The physics is well-established, the design tools are proven, and the construction methods are straightforward. The only thing that prevents passive solar design from being universal is the inertia of conventional construction practice and the artificially low cost of fossil-fuel energy, which for decades made it cheaper to burn oil than to design intelligently.
That equation has now changed permanently. The cost of energy is rising, its availability is uncertain, and its ecological consequences are severe. Passive solar design is not simply an ethical choice; it is the technically superior approach for building in most of the world’s inhabited climates.
