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: Eco-Friendly Home Generates Zero Bills for Water Power, Earns Rs 10K Too! #IndiaNEWS #Gujarat Standing outside Kanubhai Karkare’s house in Amreli, Gujarat, will probably seem like another concrete

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Posted in: #IndiaNEWS #Gujarat

Eco-Friendly Home Generates Zero Bills for Water Power, Earns Rs 10K Too! #IndiaNEWS #Gujarat
Standing outside Kanubhai Karkare’s house in Amreli, Gujarat, will probably seem like another concrete building fitted in the neighbourhood. However, a walk around it will reveal its unique, sustainable features loaded inside his house.
An officer at the education department of the state government, Kanubhai, designed and built the house in 2000 for Rs 2. 8 lakh. However, rather than blindly relying on an architect for the task, he designed the house ensuring that it serves as an example of how a sustainable home can be built in an urban set-up.
Kanubhai’s house can meet the water requirements without sourcing it from elsewhere for three years.
Underground rainwater harvesting structure.
Additionally, the family grows organic vegetables to meet nutrient requirements and treat their sewage water within the premises. Moreover, it receives Rs 10,000 from the government by supplying electricity to the grid.
Kanubhai explains his inspiration to introduce sustainable features stemmed from the issue of water scarcity reeling in the Saurashtra region of the state.
“The region faces the brunt of water scarcity every summer, and our neighbourhood receives water 15 days a month. It causes immense inconvenience, and hence I decided to take sustainable measures to resolve the crisis,� he tells The Better India.
Kanubhai positioned the house allowing it to receive maximum sunlight. He made the windows larger than the conventional size and ensured that the house had air circulation with a horizontal cross-ventilation technique. “This ensures the air gets cooled before entering the house,� he says.
“The structural design helped reduce the need to use electrical lighting and fans during the day,� he says.
To address the water scarcity issues, Kanubhai built a 20,000-litre capacity underground water tank that stores rainwater during the monsoon. Another water tank of 8,000 litre capacity in the backyard serves the needs of gardening and other non-domestic needs.
“If both the tanks overflow due to excess rains, the rainwater is harvested and directed to recharge the groundwater table. Thus, the rainwater received in our house premises is channelised for domestic purpose or returned to nature,� he says, adding that he innovated the concept to arrest rainwater.
Solar panel installed at Kanubhais house.
To recycle the sewage water from the house, Kanubhai has created 2-feet-long vegetation beds with specific plant species that break down the complex elements present in the waste and decompose them. “The recycled water is then used for kitchen gardening or other usages. We grow all our vegetables in the backyard as the ones available in the market are chemically grown, unhealthy, poisonous for human consumption and the environment,� he says.


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