Buried dome home into mountain for $80K. Now he gardens the roof
Nov 16, 2025•Channel
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Video Overview
Video Details
Published7 months ago
Duration21:15
Video IDlpKBsC7ulZk
Languageen
CategoryHowto & Style
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views18K
Likes1.4K
Comments69
Engagement Rate8.14%
Likes per 100 views7.75
Comments per 1K views3.84
Video Tags
#buried home#underground home#dome home#earth sheltered house#underground bunker house#fire resistant home#off grid home#diy home build#grass valley california#hillside home#passive solar home#shotcrete dome#living roof#rooftop garden#homestead#affordable home build#alternative housing#eco home#energy efficient home#owner builder
Description
Brad and Julia built their buried dome home by carving directly into a steep mountainside— a 23% grade so extreme the land was considered nearly unusable— but this challenging terrain was exactly what they wanted: a hillside deep enough to tuck their house underground for insulation, energy efficiency, and wildfire protection.
Drawing inspiration from the blast-protection shelters he once worked in—structures that stayed cool in summer and warm in winter—Brad engineered his own bunker-style dome. He and Julia then built about 90% of the home themselves, keeping their total cost to roughly $80,000 on their land in Grass Valley, California.
They hired professionals only for the essentials: dynamiting the rocky slope, moving earth, and spraying the shotcrete. For the rest—even the tedious tasks like tying 65,000 pieces of rebar—they relied on determination, creativity, and “dome-raising” parties with friends.
The result is an underground home so airtight and well-insulated that their solar panels supply the power they need. Even on cloudy days, they barely dip into their backup resources. In two decades, they have used only a fraction of their firewood and have never needed to refill their propane tank.
Above the dome, Brad transformed the rooftop into a thriving garden. Today, the living roof supports an orchard of 16 fig trees, vegetables, and other plantings that help regulate temperature, absorb rainfall, and turn the home into part of the landscape.
On *faircompanies: https://faircompanies.com/videos/buried-dome-home-into-mountain-for-80k-total-now-he-gardens-the-roof/