Malcolm Wells (March 11, 1926 – November 27, 2009) was an American architect who is regarded as "the father of modern earth-sheltered architecture." ... Wells was also a writer, illustrator, draftsman, lecturer, cartoonist, columnist, and solar energy consultant.
Malcolm Wells (wikipedia), the father of
underground building, wrote an article that appeared in the "Next Whole Earth Catalog" about, among other things, this simple and ingenious device for rating the desirability of a building. It's a scorecard that you fill out by rating a building or site according to a bunch of common-sense criteria about what makes it good, healthy, and
sustainable. You give the building a score from -100 to 100 on each dimension and then add up the scores to get the total rating for the building or
project.
Destroys pure air <—> Creates pure air
Destroys pure
water <—> Creates pure water
Wastes rainwater <—> Stores rainwater
Produces no food <—> Produces surplus food
Destroys rich soil <—> Creates rich soil
Wastes
solar energy <—> Uses
solar energy
Stores no solar energy <—> Stores solar energy
Destoys serenity <—> Creates serenity
Dumps waste <—> Consumes waste
Needs maintainence <—> Self-maintaining
Disregards Nature's cycles <—> Matches Nature's cycles
Destroys wildlife habitat <—> Provides wildlife habitat
Destroys human habitat <—> Provides human habitat
Instensifies
local weather <—> Moderates local weather
Is ugly <—> Is beautiful
There are lots of ways to improve existing buildings. Rainwater catchments are an easy win, even if you only use the water to irrigate. If you add an attached
greenhouse to a building you can gain several advantages at once: create pure air; produces own food; creates rich soil; uses and stores solar energy; consumes its own wastes (composting); matches nature's cycles; provides human habitat; and, if done well, is beautiful.