Making the world's first earth sheltered geodesic dome
with Passive Annual Heat Storage
Geodome Under Construction Tour, 1979-1980In the summer of 1979 John N. Hait, the inventor of Passive Annual Heat Storage had been organizing a
series of his inventions for the production of gasohol. While his alcohol distillation equipment seemed capable of producing 6.23 times as much alcohol fuel per BTU as the conventional equipment then in use, The government grant he was pursuing required that the entire production facility to be as energy efficient as possible. So he undertook the study of thermodynamics, and structural engineering. The most energy efficient candidate turned out to be an earth sheltered geodesic dome, shown here in completed form.
The comment was made that this would make a
"really neat house." So he moved out all the equipment,
move in the furniture and went seeking the funds to build it. A
fellow Montanan, Kent Harris, stepped up to the plate. The goal
was to build, not just one home, but to design and build a
concrete precasting facility capable of mass producing these
incredible structures. Thus began one of the most unusual
construction stories of the 20th century. One that
became one of the most
exciting scientific endeavors.
Bucky Fullers above ground domes were beginning to dot the landscape in various places around the country. While being known for their great strength, there is a very great difference between a 60 lb. roof load of an above-ground home, and the 660 lb. load of 4 feet of earth added to that. Concrete was the logical choice of building materials. Four inches thick. Steel-fibrous reinforced concrete with greater than a 7 bag max. Some of the meanest, toughest concoctions ever devised. The Geodome has 1.5 million pounds of dirt on it, and its engineered to hold another million.
Structural engineer Tom Bodette solidified
Haits geodesic design into a strong working structure. In
1979, very few engineers had ever heard of a "finite element
analysis" such as the one Tom required. We found such a
program at Boeing, one they used to engineer spacecraft. To
program it, we found Prof. Supernaut from Montana State
University, in Bozeman, MT.
While paging through the 6 inch thick
computer printout, Tom said, "This is a right stout
building!" "Why do you say that?," asked Hait. His
reply: "The typical reinforced concrete beam, spanning 20
feet is allowed to sag ¾ of an inch before it is out of
tolerance. In this 39 foot dome, the largest deflection I can
find is 4 one hundreds of an inch!" Subsequent measurements
of the actual stress in the concrete during backfilling proved
the computer program to be right on the money.
Expert professional cement contractor Bobby Ossage Jr. (above) was brought in to supervise this complex concrete project. Here he can be seen trowlling off one of the 11.5-ton pentagons and hexagons in the precasting form.
A special thanks goes to Kent Harris and Environmental Dynamics for funding the project.