More importantly, these features would enable the Moon Village to carry out its much larger purpose as a scientific, industrial, and entertainment development, and an endeavor with far-reaching goals. These inflatable structures would provide-together with regolith-based protective shells-resistance to extreme temperatures, projectiles, regolith dust, and solar radiation. The concept calls for three to four-story structures, with workspaces, living quarters, and environmental control and life support systems. The individual pressurized modules are designed to inflate and expand to increase user space for future growth and program requirements. Additionally, each cluster of modules would be connected to enable seamless mobility between structures, with communications towers on the highest ridges of the uneven terrain. The settlement would be clustered close to the crater’s water-ice deposits. Water from the permanently shadowed depressions near the South Pole would be extracted to create breathable air and rocket propellant for transportation and for the support of industrial activities. This kind of planning is essential for the first of three envisioned development phases-several critical infrastructural components and habitable structures-that would allow the Village to harness sunlight for energy and set up in situ resource utilization (ISRU) experiments, or the generation of food and other life-sustaining elements using the Moon’s natural resources. The master plan envisions a Moon Village on the rim of Shackleton Crater, near the moon’s South Pole, which receives near continuous daylight throughout the lunar year. Resiliency and self-sufficiency are key design requirements. This experience is coupled with faculty from MIT’s Aerospace Engineering Department, and SOM’s extensive experience in architecture, engineering, urban planning, and sustainable design, ensuring a holistic approach to the project. ESA is providing a diverse range of expertise from the European Astronaut Centre and the European Space Research and Technology Centre. Solving the challenges of designing a habitat for the moon environment requires cross-disciplinary collaboration, and a completely new way of approaching the space industry’s most complicated problems. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP (SOM), in partnership with the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), has released a design for a “Moon Village,” a concept presented by ESA Director General Jan Woerner for the first full-time human habitat on the lunar surface. Five decades after humans first set foot on the Moon and more than 45 years since the last foot left its surface, a new initiative is underway to return there, and this time the aspiration is to settle there on a permanent basis.
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