Eco Dome Types and Applications
Eco-friendly geodesic domes use less material to build and lose less heat than a conventional structure of the same size. The rounded form has no flat walls to lose heat through and no corners where air stagnates, so the interior stays comfortable on less energy year-round.
Polycarbonate Luxury Aura Dome™ and airtight Aura QUAD™ models suit off-grid studios, garden retreats, and low-energy living spaces with the QUAD's sealed panel system reducing heating demand in cold climates. Insulated Alpine Hut PVC domes use PIR panels for high thermal performance in sustainable year-round dwellings. For food production, the Fiberglass PVC Greenhouse and All-Season Insulated Growing Dome support year-round growing with minimal external energy input. Insulated glass domes serve as permanent low-energy structures where natural light replaces daytime lighting entirely.
Shop similar collections: Greenhouse Domes | Insulated Domes | Garden Pod | Geodesic Domes
Efficient by Shape, Not Just by Spec
A geodesic dome heats and cools more efficiently than a conventional structure of the same floor area. The curved form allows warm air to circulate evenly and IR heaters work efficiently against the rounded interior. Natural light enters uniformly through the panels throughout the day reducing or eliminating the need for daytime lighting. The result is a structure that needs less energy to keep comfortable year-round.
Built From Responsibly Sourced European Materials
Every dome is built with certified materials from Europe's top manufacturers. Timber struts are cut from sustainably managed Finnish forests. Steel comes from Italy, Austria, and Germany, polycarbonate from the UK and glass from Saint-Gobain and Guardian. Polycarbonate panels carry a 25+ year UV-resistant service life, and the semi-permanent designs install without concrete foundations leaving the ground beneath largely undisturbed and allowing the structure to be relocated or removed without lasting site impact.