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Proposed Energy Apron : Model : Cosanti Foundation |
The
Arcosanti Project,
located 70 miles north of Phoenix, is constructing a living
demonstration of a compact three-dimensional town, a proposed
alternative to suburban sprawl, concentrated on 10 acres
in
the Arizona desert. An integral part of the design and coupled
to this prototype town will be five to seven acres of south
facing sloping greenhouses, an "energy apron" acting as a
central system for producing food and collecting energy to
support
the prototype town.
Arcosanti has been continuously involved in greenhouse research
and design development since 1974 under the direction of architect Paolo Soleri, his design staff and outside
consultants.
The
conceptual research of the greenhouse as a large central
system
for food and energy production was carried out from 1974-1976.
This work was made possible by a $25,000 grant from Xerox
Corporation, with matching funds from the Cosanti
Foundation, the American Revolution Bicentennial Administration
and the Environmental Research Laboratory at the university
of Arizona. Extensive research, carried out from 1976-1978
, resulted in the construction of a prototype greenhouse
in
1979. This facility has been operating in a passive mode
since March 1979, generating both agricultural and climactic
data
necessary for further greenhouse development, specifically
aiding in the designs of the first full scale segment of
the
energy apron.

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