Native American wetu: a dome house preceding Bucky Fuller
The Wampanoag people who lived along the U.S. East Coast built dome-shaped homes called wetus. The round shape was most efficient for heating or cooling the home evenly and for withstanding high winds and hurricanes. It also emerged naturally from the support structure built from saplings bent to create a frame. The winter homes were covered in bark and the summer homes were covered in mats woven from cattail reeds. “I know some people who wouldn’t mind going back to the traditional houses,” explains Tim Turner, manager of the Wampanoag Indigenous Program at Plimouth Plantation. “The Wampanoag lived in these houses until about the 1960s on Cape Cod. In the 1940s or so it was outlawed because it didn’t have running water or electricity." Plimoth Plantation Wampanoag Homesite: http://www.plimoth.org/what-see-do/wa... Original story: http://faircompanies.com/videos/view/...

Couple builds homestead of 12 earthen domes linked like private village

Engineer's underground dome home blends into desert like living organism

Bucky Fuller & Spaceship Earth. A short film by Ivorypress.

What Happened to Germany's Royal Family After They Lost the Throne?

Turns forsaken WW2 bunker into perfect Arctic underground cabin

Inside Africa's Food Forest Mega-Project

These Sustainable DESERT DOMES Will Blow Your Mind!

I Restored My Grandpa’s Forgotten House from Scratch

I Made Mankind's Oldest Weapons

Building ecovillage of storm-proof homes made of bone-like biomaterial

21 Years Living Off-Grid on a Remote Island in a Self-Built Cabin & Homestead

Construction Tour of Monolithic Dome Home with Rainwater Cistern

Tiny Homes Of The Ancient World: Celtic Iron Age Roundhouses

Building a Native American Longhouse with Hand Tools | The Best Natural Bushcraft Shelter

Surviving -50°C: How Shepherds COOKS and SLEEPS in a Frozen Tent

The homes of nomads in Russia's Arctic tundra can withstand the HARSHEST frosts in the WORLD.

Couldn’t afford a house. Now he builds his own underground Missouri home

Grandmother Builds Incredible Home From MUD, For Less Than €2,000

The Entire History of Paris in 37 Minutes

