Pangea Biotecture operates in the Taos, New Mexico bioregion — a high desert plateau at 7,000 feet elevation, with cold winters, intense summer monsoons, and extremes of sun and wind. This bioregion has shaped a distinctive approach to community development: thick-walled thermal mass buildings, acequia water systems, roof-harvested rainwater, and long traditions of community self-governance.

The design principles in this book are grounded in Taos but transferable. Every bioregion has its own climate patterns, land tenure traditions, water availability, and building material palette. The framework applies universally; the specific implementations will vary by place.

When Pangea designs a community in the Taos bioregion, we work with: 14 inches of annual precipitation, monsoon seasonality, abundant solar resource (330+ sunny days per year), strong north winds, clay-based soils with caliche layers, and existing acequia infrastructure in many valleys. These conditions shape every design decision from site layout to building orientation to water storage sizing.