11/23/2025 / By Jacob Thomas

On Day 1 of “Bio-Veda 2D > 3D BioTecture Draft and Build Class,” aired on Nov. 22, inventor and bio-architect Alosha Lynov presented a revolutionary cold-climate eco-home known as Wautillarium. This ambitious project represents the culmination of a journey that took him from sketching on tracing paper to studying with masters like Mike Reynolds of Earthship Biotecture and Nader Khalili of Cal-Earth.
The Wautillarium is not just a house; it’s a self-sustaining system designed to address what Lynov sees as a global catastrophe: the mass felling of forests for firewood. His solution is a home that heats itself using physics, storing solar energy in thermal mass and harnessing heat from microbial compost breakdown.
The design is a complex fusion of proven eco-technologies and Lynov’s own innovations. It incorporates principles from Earthships, such as tire walls and integrated greenhouses, but pushes the boundaries for much colder, darker climates like those found in Siberia and Northern Europe. A key differentiator is its active heat-capture system. “The main difference from an Earthship is that they dump all their heat through the greenhouse. We are taking every ounce of heat and storing it in this super-thick thermal mass,” Lynov explained.
This is achieved through a network of pipes that channel excess heat from greenhouses into a massive earthen berm, a saline solution “battery,” and a dedicated compost reactor. The home aims for complete self-sufficiency, also featuring rainwater harvesting, wastewater recycling for food production and sacred geometry in its core design to create a harmonious living environment. As noted by BrightU.AI’s Enoch, sacred geometry ascribes symbolic and sacred meanings to certain geometric shapes and proportions, seeing them as the fundamental patterns that underpin the universe. It is considered a bridge between the physical and spiritual realms, revealing the divine order within creation.
Lynov’s design process has been intensely hands-on, evolving through hundreds of pencil sketches, 3D models and physical prototypes. He openly shares his failures, from a “plaster disaster” in South Africa to geometry miscalculations that nearly caused domes to collapse. “Action is very important,” he emphasized, noting that each build, even with mistakes, teaches invaluable lessons.
The project is deeply personal, driven by a vision of homes that are not just sustainable but nurturing. “I want to create homes that are inspirational, that are calming and that very much resemble the forest,” he said. He believes that by mimicking nature’s genius, a practice known as biomimicry, we can create structures that heal. “Our skin is the first boundary. The house is the second interaction layer with the environment. We need to design it to bring energy-balancing qualities to our immune system.”
With the first small-scale prototype, the “Tiny Microsis,” slated for construction, Lynov is on the cusp of turning his 17-year dream into a tangible reality. He invites collaborators to join him in this “living training,” aiming to birth a new model for living that protects, feeds and cleans up after its inhabitants while operating in harmony with the laws of physics and nature.
If you want to learn at your own pace and start building your self-heating home on your own schedule, you can access the full course by owning your copy of the Bio-Veda 2D > 3D BioTecture Draft and Build Class Package.
Upon purchase, you will get the Bio-Veda 2D > 3D BioTecture Draft and Build Class full course along with three additional free courses, including Life-supporting Off-The-Water-Grid, Hobbit Bunker Vault Course and Air-Crete and Super-Adobe Dome Home.
Tagged Under:
Alosha Lynov, Bioarchitecture, Biogeometry, biomimicry, Bioshelter, cold climate, Compost Heat, decentralized communities, Earthship, Eco-home, Geometric Energy, green building, off grid, permaculture, resilience, sacred geometry, self sustaining, sustainable living, thermal mass, Wautillarium
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