Years ago (70's energy crisis), I toured a local house built by a guy who wanted a nearly energy independent house. Sorry that I don't have exact detail or a source, but here's some of the stuff he did. The house was beautiful and according to him, very efficient. A lot of this stuff ties together, but I'll just list them:
1. The house was earth bermed 100% on the north, about 50% in ground on the east and west, and open on the south. Think of a giant lean-to with the south being the open end, and that's kinda how it was constructed.
2. The south side was about two stories tall, with floor to ceiling, highly insulated glass. These south windows had photo sensing heavy quilted blinds that closed as dusk and opened at sunrise in the winter.
3. The south 10-12 feet, the length of the house, was an integral greenhouse, about two stories tall. The floor was a heat absorbing rock. The theory was sun heated the greenhouse, stored the heat in the rock, and then was able to draw that heat through the house in cool nights.
4. Air Movement from the greenhouse ran from the top of the greenhouse to the north rear of the house, through a couple of enclosed rafters. Small electric fans at the peak forced the warm air through the house from the north to the south, dumping back into the greenhouse to complete the loop. Oh, he had calculated the sun angle, so in summer, the eves kept the sun off the glass!
5. For cooling, he had buried 3 two foot diameter culverts that were probably 100 ft long. At the far end of each culvert, he had a two ft diameter vertical tube to allow outside air into the system. This system fed into the south side of the house. The details escape me, but at the peak of the roof, he had electrically operated louvered doors that opened to the outside. During a normal summer south wind, the opened roof doors created a venturi effect to suck the hot air (the ceilings were vaulted) out and draw the cooled air in. If the wind was not blowing, he had installed 1/4HP squirrel cage fans in each culvert to move the air.
6. All these doors, shades, and such were on a control panel that was temperature sensitive, so a lot of it was automatic. He also had a wood stove inside, but said he had not used it much yet (the house was about a year old).
I was impressed!
Ron