Some time ago I wrote about how some developers like to plop the same kind of house down in all climates. Which is DUMB.
So I was delighted to read this article in my latest issue of Natural Home Magazine called Climate Control by Carol Venolia. It’s about the which housing typologies are approriate for different climates. THANK YOU.

In the hot Southwest, thick adobe walls help keep heat out.

The first time I flew into Honolulu, I was surprised to find buildings that could have been air-lifted from Los Angeles built on distinctly Hawaiian beaches and volcanoes. Only at tourist attractions did I see replicas of native tropical homes – raised above the ground on posts with deep overhanging roofs and air-permeable walls – designed to maximize the cooling effects of shade and breezes. Honolulu isn’t unusual. Nationwide, we’ve divorced ourselves from the specifics of climate and place through massive consumption of fossil fuels. Furnaces and air conditioners keep us warm or cool as we forget the energy-saving role of building design itself.
Before the industrial era, people built with local materials in response to local climate, topography, vegetation and culture. They looked to the sun for heat and light, augmenting it with fire. For cooling, they used shade, breezes and evaporation. This gave rise to regional styles as distinct as the Southwest’s adobe pueblos, the New England saltbox, the Southern dogtrot home and the Nebraska sod house.
“Design in response to local climate is the most powerful thing you can do to save energy and restore a sense of place,” says John S. Reynolds, professor emeritus of architecture at the University of Oregon.
Climate regions
Climate is defined by the combination of sun, wind, water and topography in a given area. In broad terms, the continental United States has four basic climate regions: cold, hot dry, hot humid, and temperate mixed.
A climate region is named for its most challenging season – for example, “hot dry” to describe the Southwestern desert. The Southwest also has cold and wet seasons, and the cold northern Midwest has hot summers. If you design to meet the greatest climatic challenge, it will take less energy to address other challenges.
Climate challenges
Your particular climate may offer additional challenges. Living near a large body of water, in a canyon, in dense forest or in hurricane country makes a difference.
Your local building codes may include climate-related criteria. Current codes typically incorporate minimum energy-efficiency standards linked to local climate challenges. A local energy-efficiency consultant can help you navigate these codes – preferably exceeding minimum standards.
Cold North
In cold northern states, the main challenge is to get heat indoors and keep it there. You need efficient heat sources, tight construction, thick insulation and solar heating. When you keep warm by preventing fresh air from entering the home, attention to indoor air quality is a must.

Passive solar heating – letting the sun shine directly onto interior thermal mass so it can radiate its stored heat when temperatures drop – is a boon in winter if your site receives sufficient sunshine. This strategy involves three main components: south-facing glass to admit midday sun; interior thermal mass (stone, earth, concrete, brick, tile or thick plaster) to store solar heat; and insulation to retain the heat.

Designing for cold climates
Hot dry Southwest
Dry summer heat is the thing to beat in the desert. The region’s traditionally thick-walled adobes were built to keep heat out. Natural cooling and passive solar heating work well in this climate.

Designing for hot dry climates
Hot humid Southeast

In the Southeast, hot, muggy summers are the issue. Climate-responsive design emphasizes shading and ventilation, supported by good insulation. The same shading and reflection techniques that help in a hot dry region apply here, with special care to invite cooling breezes. Traditional Southern buildings maximized natural ventilation.

Designing for hot humid climates

Temperate mixed Midwest
The challenge in the middle regions of the United States is that there isn’t an outstanding challenge; summer heat and winter cold can be equally uncomfortable. All of the strategies mentioned above may be applicable at some point.

The trick is to be able to switch between different strategies—to have what John Reynolds calls a “switch rich” house. A switch is anything that can be used in more than one position, offering different benefits. A retractable awning or operable shutters can be open or closed, depending on the season, and deciduous vines provide shade when you need it most.

Resources
Builder’s Guide to Cold Climates by Joseph Lstiburek
Builder’s Guide to Hot/Humid Climates by Joseph Lstiburek
Builder’s Guide to Mixed-Humid Climates by Joseph Lstiburek
Builder’s Guide to Hot-Dry & Mixed-Dry Climates by Joseph Lstiburek
Sun, Wind & Light: Architectural Design Strategies by G.Z. Brown and Mark DeKay
Climate Responsive Design: A Study of Buildings in Moderate and Hot Humid Climates by Richard Hyde
Courtyards: Aesthetic, Social, and Thermal Delight by John S. Reynolds
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I am starting a new kind of architecture school. Unlike most architecture schools, you wouldn't have to submit GRE scores or good grades or letters of recommendation. You wouldn't have to put the rest of your life on hold for 3 to 5 years. You wouldn't have to accrue tens of thousands of dollars in debt. At my architecture school, anyone could come for a few weeks and learn how to build a house with their own two hands. My teachers would take skills and concepts from some of these other workshops I've listed above... except classes would be held year-round to make it easy to fit into your schedule. I would have a number of different campuses around the country that would teach building designs appropriate to the local climate. And I need your help. Can you donate land for a campus? Can you dotate books for a library? Can you teach a workshop? Can you provide start-up capital? Let me know.
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