Inside the Off-Grid Earthship Community in New Mexico 🇺🇸

Peter Santenello
November 15, 2025
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About This Video

Peter Santanello visits the Earthship Biotecture community just outside Taos, New Mexico, where he explores a cluster of off-grid, self-sufficient homes designed to operate independently from conventional utilities. Guided by architect and Earthship founder Michael Reynolds, he walks through multiple Earthship models, learning how they collect rainwater, generate solar power, regulate temperature naturally, and recycle wastewater to grow food indoors. The setting—high desert landscape along Highway 64—highlights how these homes are built directly into the earth to withstand extreme temperatures while remaining comfortable year-round.

Inside the Earthships, Santanello examines the details of daily life, including greenhouse corridors filled with fruit trees, gray-water systems that feed plants, and thick tire-and-earth walls that provide thermal stability and sound insulation. He visits both completed homes and structures still under construction, including a simplified “Model T” design intended to make Earthships more affordable and scalable. Conversations with Reynolds and community members emphasize the philosophy behind the project: creating housing that meets basic human needs—shelter, water, power, food, and sanitation—without dependence on external systems.

The video also features time spent with full-time residents who explain why they chose this lifestyle, describing a sense of peace, independence, and resilience that comes from living off the grid. Santanello observes how the community balances isolation with proximity to town, offering quiet desert living while remaining within reach of modern amenities. The episode concludes by framing the Earthship community as both an experiment and a long-term solution, presenting an alternative vision of housing rooted in sustainability, self-reliance, and adaptability in an uncertain future.