Geoship’s Roadmap to Radical Affordability: A Systems Approach to Regenerative Housing
- morgan4287
- Jun 3
- 5 min read
Updated: Jun 3
Ahoy visionaries,
Morgan here, co-founder and Chief Vision Officer at Geoship. As our journey gains momentum, we felt inspired to share a deeper look into one of the most important aspects of our mission: radical affordability, and how we’re strategically approaching it.
Creating truly affordable, regenerative homes requires more than good intentions. It demands a clear, phased strategy that considers materials, production, economics, and culture as an interconnected system.
This post is our way of collaborating on that strategy with you. To share where we’re headed, how we plan to get there, and why we believe this approach can unlock a new era of housing. We offer it in the spirit of transparency and gratitude for those of you who are already on board, and for those just beginning to tune in.
Rebuilding Housing from the Ground Up
At Geoship, we’re addressing a systemic failure: housing that’s unaffordable, ecologically harmful, and disconnected from human and planetary well-being. In 2025, median U.S. home prices near $430,000, consuming over 40% of household income, while conventional construction—reliant on toxic materials and wasteful processes—crumbles under climate stress. Our response is a rigorous, phased strategy to deliver homes that are radically affordable, resilient, healthy, and regenerative.
Geoship was founded to continue Buckminster Fuller’s mission:
“To make the world work for 100% of humanity, in the shortest possible time, through spontaneous cooperation, without ecological offense, or the disadvantage of anybody.”
The Problem: Housing Misaligned with Life
The housing system is failing on multiple fronts. Conventional construction produces homes that are fragile, resource-intensive, and unhealthy—built with materials that emit volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and contribute 37% of global CO2 emissions. Stick-frame structures struggle against intensifying climate threats like wildfires, floods, and earthquakes, while their energy inefficiency and poor indoor air quality undermine occupant well-being.
These are not isolated flaws but symptoms of a deeper misalignment: a model that prioritizes short-term cost over long-term value, exploiting both people and planet.
Geoship’s thesis is that the best home—resilient, sustainable, and health-enhancing—can also be the most affordable. We’re reengineering shelter from first principles, using advanced bioceramic composites, geodesic design, and decentralized microfactories to deliver homes that regenerate ecosystems and communities.
Our target is clear: mortgage payments under 30% of median income by 2030, with a long-term goal of 20%, paired with a net-positive ecological, biological, and social impact. This is housing redesigned to serve life, not strain it.
A Phased Strategy for Scale
Transforming housing is a sacred mission that requires awareness and precision, not haste. Our three-phase approach—Pilot It, Nail It, Scale It—balances technical validation, operational maturity, and financial sustainability. Each phase builds on the last, de-risking the model and unlocking capital for exponential growth.
Phase 1: Pilot It (2025–2027)
Objective: Validate product-market fit, refine systems, and establish baseline production.
Product: Amma Founder Series—premium geodesic domes built with bioceramic composites.
Volume: 10+ homes/year.
Price: ~$500,000, competitive with California spec homes.
Key Deliverables:
Deploy high-performance domes, each serving as a testbed for materials, assembly, and logistics.
Optimize supply chain and installation processes to make the assembly of your dream home seamless, of the highest quality, and ever faster.
The Founder Series is our go-to-market product—engineered to survive generations, built to withstand climate extremes, and designed with deep attention to human and planetary health. Every dome teaches us something. Each one strengthens our design, improves our process, and builds trust with the early community.
This is where the system becomes real. Not just a prototype, but a product in the world.
Phase 2: Nail It (2028–2031)
Objective: Scale production, diversify models, and optimize unit economics.
Product: More Amma models, with new options.
Volume: 100+ homes/year.
Price: 10–30% below average new home cost per square foot.
Key Deliverables:
Launch a volume production facility
Introduce cost-optimized models, targeting diverse market segments (starter homes to premium)
Expand to national markets, prioritizing climate-vulnerable regions
Reduce material and labor costs through process automation and supply chain localization
In Phase 2, we move from precision to production. We refine our bioceramic forming process, automate key steps, and localize sourcing to reduce costs and delivery times. The product line expands, but the core promise remains: every home remains beautiful, resilient, and regenerative.
This phase unlocks real affordability while preserving design integrity. It's where the model becomes truly durable.
Phase 3: Scale It (2031+)
Objective: Achieve mass-market affordability
Product: The same great product and service—just faster and with a generally better experience.
Volume: 1,000+ homes/year
Price: 30–60% below average new home cost per square foot
Key Deliverables:
Deploy a network of regional microfactories to produce ceramic and other value-added components and systems
Reduce mortgage payments to be under 30% of median income
Implement circular material cycles, enabling end-of-life recyclability
Phase 3 is where Geoship’s full offering is enabled. Microfactories produce domes close to where people live, using local labor and materials to lower emissions and increase resilience. Assembly becomes faster, costs drop further, and access expands dramatically.
Now, with accelerating Geoship adoption and demonstrated customer empowerment, a future of regenerative living is enabled, self-replicating, and governed by those it serves.
This is where affordability, regeneration, and community come together—at scale.
Social Purpose: Building for 100% of Humanity
Geoship is not just solving a housing problem. It’s tuning the system. Housing is one of the root structures of civilization, and right now, that root is fractured—ecologically, economically, and spiritually.
Our work is grounded in Buckminster Fuller’s mission to make the world work for all of humanity, in the shortest possible time, without ecological offense or the disadvantage of anyone. That’s not philosophy. It’s design criteria.
We’re building homes that regenerate health, restore ecosystems, and create economic models that include rather than coerce. Every dome is engineered to last centuries, emit less, cost less, and serve in ways we dare to imagine. But that’s only part of it. We're designing living systems that heal, materials that clean the air, ownership models that unblock wealth, and villages that restore human connection with the natural world.
We’re building toward a future where affordability, ecological harmony, and social equity are not competing goals—but complementary outcomes.

A Call to Build
This is not just a dome. It’s the beginning of something necessary.
Sacred geometry. Biological materials. A structure that feels inevitable once you see it.
What makes it powerful is what it points to—a future built on different assumptions. A future where homes heal, villages thrive, and our built environment reflects the more beautiful world we know is possible.
The regenerative future is about to begin. No longer a dream, but a lived reality. This vast future potential is like a living being—seeking those who seek it.
Invest in the Journey
If our mission resonates with you and you feel aligned with the path we’re walking, we’d be honored to welcome you into our investor community. We’re currently raising through a community round on Wefunder, where you can become an investor for as little as $500. In addition to sharing in the potential upside of our growth, you’ll unlock exciting perks and help bring a regenerative future closer to reality.
Please checkout our pitch page and join us here: https://wefunder.com/geoship
Does this mean if you make a reservation for the 2b2b model you will not be able to construct it for several years?
When can I buy one?