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A German architect built a cylindrical house in 1994 that rotates to follow the sun throughout the day, generates 5 times more energy than it consumes, and was the world’s first energy-positive house.

Written by Flavia Marinho
Published on 22/04/2026 at 19:41
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The whole house turns on a central axis like a mechanical sunflower, the solar panels on the roof follow the sun from east to west and capture the maximum light possible throughout the day

Sunflowers have been doing this for millions of years: they turn their face towards the sun to absorb more light.

In 1994, German architect Rolf Disch decided that a house could do the same.

He built the Heliotrope in Freiburg, in southwestern Germany, one of the sunniest cities in the country.

The house is cylindrical, mounted on a central pillar that serves as a rotation axis.

A silent electric motor slowly rotates the entire structure throughout the day, following the position of the sun.

On the roof, a solar panel of 56 square meters tilted at 30 degrees captures direct light.

When the sun sets, the house turns the windows to the opposite side, reducing heat loss during the night.

It’s as if the building breathes along with the cycle of the day.

Generates 5 times more energy than it consumes

The Heliotrope is not just efficient. It is absurdly surplus.

The solar panels produce about 8,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity per year.

The house consumes approximately 1,600 kilowatt-hours.

That is, it generates 5 times more energy than it needs.

The surplus is sold to the city’s power grid.

The house literally generates energy profit. Every month, the owner receives money instead of paying an electricity bill.

In 1994, when it was inaugurated, this concept seemed like science fiction.

Rolf Disch called it Plusenergiehaus — positive energy house.

Solar panels on rotating house roof
Solar panels on the tilted roof of the Heliotrope follow the sun throughout the day.

How the house turns without the resident noticing

The rotation is so slow that no one inside the house feels the movement.

The structure completes a full 360-degree turn over several hours.

The base is a concrete pillar of 14 meters high that contains the staircase and technical installations.

The rooms are located in the cylindrical part that rotates around this pillar.

The water, sewage, and electricity connections pass through rotary joints in the central axis, similar to those on oil platforms.

The kitchen, bedrooms, and living room rotate together. Everything moves, except the pillar.

In winter, the house turns its back on the cold

The trick of the Heliotrope is not just to follow the sun.

In winter, when the sun is low, the house positions its large triple-glazed windows facing south, capturing every available ray of heat.

At night, the insulated wall, which has no windows, faces north, blocking the cold wind.

In summer, the process is reversed.

The house rotates the windows away from the strongest afternoon sun, reducing overheating.

It is a passive climate control system that does not use air conditioning or heating.

The solar neighborhood that was born after the house

After the success of the Heliotrope, Rolf Disch designed the Sonnenschiff, the Ship of the Sun.

It is a complex of 59 apartments and commercial spaces in Freiburg, all with solar roofs.

The entire neighborhood produces more energy than it consumes.

Residents receive credits on their electricity bills instead of debits.

Freiburg has become a global reference in solar urbanism, attracting delegations of architects from dozens of countries.

It all started with a cylindrical house that decided to imitate a sunflower.

Why aren’t there thousands of houses like this

The Heliotrope was expensive to build. The rotation mechanism and the central pillar raise the price far above that of a conventional house.

Additionally, the system requires land with free circular space around it, which does not work in narrow urban lots.

The rotation motor, although simple, requires periodic maintenance.

And in cities with little sunlight, the energy gain does not justify the investment.

Even so, the concept proved that a house can not only be energy self-sufficient but also export the surplus.

An idea from 1994 that the world has not yet reached

More than 30 years have passed since the inauguration of the Heliotrope.

The majority of houses built today still consume more energy than necessary.

Poor insulation, poorly positioned windows, roofs without solar panels.

Rolf Disch showed in 1994 that there was another way.

A house that rotates, that produces, that returns energy to the city.

Thirty years later, the world is still trying to reach where he was already.

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Dr KS Sandhu
Dr KS Sandhu
25/04/2026 09:06

there is no need to rotate the entire house
we can devise a disc
On the roof
and fix the panels on it

and this can be used
to produce electricity

And that
with less cost
and worries

Goodluck
Goodluck
Reply to  Dr KS Sandhu
25/04/2026 17:15

If don’t rotate the entire house, the part where it works to control the weather will be lost.
Remember the windows.

Nehemiah
Nehemiah
Reply to  Goodluck
26/04/2026 15:41

But we can bear the heat and focus on harnessing the solar energy especially for places where they have low sunlight and are relatively colder

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Flavia Marinho

Flavia Marinho is a postgraduate engineer with extensive experience in the onshore and offshore shipbuilding industry. In recent years, she has dedicated herself to writing articles for news websites in the areas of military, security, industry, oil and gas, energy, shipbuilding, geopolitics, jobs, and courses. Contact flaviacamil@gmail.com or WhatsApp +55 21 973996379 for corrections, editorial suggestions, job vacancy postings, or advertising proposals on our portal.

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