Individual buildings in a regenerative community should be clustered to minimize infrastructure length, share walls where appropriate, and create microclimates that enhance thermal comfort. Clustering also creates the sense of place and neighborly connection that distinguishes community living from isolated rural homesteads.

Solar access drives building cluster spacing. In Taos at 36° N latitude, a two-story building with a 24-foot ridge height will cast a winter solstice shadow approximately 40 feet long at solar noon. Buildings must be spaced to preserve solar access to south-facing glazing of adjacent buildings. This basic calculation drives the minimum north-south spacing of building clusters.

Wind protection is another driver of cluster design. Buildings positioned north of other buildings benefit from windbreak effects while not casting shadows on south exposures. Earth berms, planted windbreaks, and building walls can be coordinated to create sheltered outdoor spaces that extend comfortable outdoor living into the shoulder seasons.

Building Cluster Design Checklist

□ All primary south glazing has unobstructed solar access from 9am to 3pm on December 21

□ Buildings step down in height from north to south within each cluster

□ Windbreak protection is provided on the north and northwest of each cluster

□ Shared covered outdoor spaces between buildings extend usable living area

□ Building clusters create defined outdoor rooms rather than undifferentiated open space

□ Pedestrian paths connect all clusters directly and safely

□ Emergency vehicle access is maintained to all buildings