Winter in central Vermont, USA.... This is a recent pic from clients Alex & Laura who built a 50-foot dome home in 2013. It's a class I, 4v icosa, 7/12 truncation, with elastomeric roofing, & custom geometry for a flat base (it differs a little from the Fuller-Kruschke subdivision). The inset photo shows the owners atop the scissor lift putting in the final struts a few months ago.
They have installed hydronic floor heating, but also have a ceramic wood-burning stove. They will soon start growing organic vegetables in their large, separate greenhouse, eventually for local sale.
- Gerry Toomey in frost-bitten West Quebec
Welcome to the group, Tracy.
I don't know the final outcome of the insulation arrangements made by the dome-home owner-builders in Vermont. One of the early designs I worked on had ventilation from ground to cupola, under the outer framework. (The pic I posted doesn't show the cupola with operable windows, which was installed later.) The owners ended up working with a local company whose sealed-insulation method did not require venting between the roof and insulation. My role was geometric calculations, with some liaison with both the architect and the engineer, and lots of contact with the owners since various aspects of the design evolved over a period of a year or so. I also sourced, milled and packaged the cedar base plates for two domes, for export/shipping to Vermont from neighbouring Québec. Thankfully, the customers took care of the customs-related paperwork. To my knowledge, all other materials were sourced locally.
I will contact you privately about my services. Basically, it's doing detailed geometric calculations and materials inventory for the dome shell, with aim of adapting the geometry to the user's needs, not the other way round. The information includes lengths and angles of components, simple shop drawings, and images from computer models of the dome.
Gerry Toomey
Consultant on dome design & geodesic math