Not the somewhat recently popular specific household commercial gadgets for cooling and heating a home, no.
Just thermodynamic pumping of heat, from the article:
Electricity from the solar arrays flows to heating elements in the earthen mound, building up heat. The storage temperature is 600 °C or higher. The outer mass of the mound, plus a favorable volume-to-area ratio, insulates and minimizes heat loss. Pipes embedded in the mound carry fluid that delivers heat to users.
and at industrial scale, using bleeding edge HVAC technological advances, it's all about the creation, storage, and pumping of heat.
One can move heat from one place to another by moving a fluid. This is not a heat pump, even if the fluid is pumped.
A heat pump is a specific kind of thermodynamic device that moves heat energy from lower to higher temperature.
The system that is described in the OP link does not use a heat pump. Electrical energy is used to make heat, but it does so with a resistive heater, not a heat pump.