
Two years ago, the American Institute of Architects put up a challenge: design a house in which a US Fish and Wildlife Service Ecologist in Residence could live and conduct research. Challenge met. Many unique ideas were put forward and three designs took away awards. Two are very…unique…as innovative prefabs tend to be, and so I liked the third the best because it has the eco-technology without losing the home-sweet-home feeling.
Two Spanish architects, Raphaelle and Alfredo Maul of Maul Dwellings, have designed The Landscape House, blending practical ecological science with architectural art.
The Landscape House is designed to be sat on an east-west axis in rural
Using resources like water efficiently is a priority, so the architects included low-flow fixtures. They also included a dry-compost toilet, recycling area, and compost unit. And of course the environmental footprint is way up there on the to-do list, so the materials for creating The Landscape House are locally sourced, recycled and renewable, and the house can be easily taken apart and set up in different locations.
I don’t think there’d be any problem in finding a number of people who would want to live in it – I’d live in it! (Then again, I’d also live in a prefab upside down canoe, as long as it is awesome and as off-grid as possible.) So, now the only thing left to do is actually build it.
Via Inhabitat

written by theirritablearchitect, June 17, 2008
The smug self-satisfaction is simply nauseous.
written by Rachel, September 24, 2010
To see another inviting 'green' prefab home, take a look at House Port's PopUP House. A Top 20 Finalist in Dwell Magazine's 2010 'Houses We Love' competition, the PopUP House is designed to be energy-efficient and low impact without sacrificing style or comfort.
Green building and prefab construction is forward-thinking architecture.
written by prefab trusses, September 14, 2012
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I came across this bit of info two days ago through another source. Unfortunately the link to the site of the Architects at Maul Dwellings can’t open the page “http://www.mdwellings.com/” because it can’t find the server “www.mdwellings.com”. I am using Safari on a MacBook Pro 3,1 and to be honest the machine works fine so it must be the server.
I would love to find more information on the Landscape House.