Earth Church is a pipeline-adjacent sanctuary built by participatory biconstruction using local natural materials: a beacon of resilience, respite, and community survival beyond chemical pollution.
The Earth Church is a community-built sanctuary and resistance symbol sited near a contested pipeline. Constructed from regional clay, straw, Spanish moss, and site-harvested wood, its honeycomb-inspired earthen forms demonstrate sustainable alternatives to petroleum-based construction materials.
This living classroom combines bioconstruction workshops with storytelling circles, uniting frontline activist communities through shared hands-on creation. People of all abilities contribute to the building process, gaining practical skills while strengthening collective resilience against extractive industries.
More than a structure, it's a space for regenerative futures - where art, ecology and activism converge. Through its very materiality and participatory creation, the Earth Church fosters solution-driven dialogue and cultivates tangible pathways to challenge fossil fuel dependence.