Nine Visions of Moontopia competition

Nine Visions of Moontopia competition

Winners Announced in Eleven’s Award-Winning Space Architecture Competition Eleven is excited to announce the winners of their latest ideas and design competition Moontopia: the first ever self-sufficient lunar colony designed for living, working, researching and – why not – a little space tourism too!

Winners – TEST LAB by Monika Lipinska, Laura Nadine Olivier and Inci Lize Ogun

Image © by Monika Lipinska, Laura Nadine Olivier and Inci Lize Ogun

A medium-scale lunar colony, Test Lab invasions a base point in the frontline of space exploration and Lunar colonisation. Beautifully presented in their sheets, this winning team have developed a design which acts as an initial base on the Moon to conduct further testing on our satellite.

Image © by Monika Lipinska, Laura Nadine Olivier and Inci Lize Ogun

The architecture can be allowed to grow and construct itself through a method of 3D printed self-assembly, gradually colonising the Moon over time. The most important structure of the Test Lab is the outer membrane. Based on a simple origami pattern and made of programmed carbon fibre, it has the ability to shape itself once it senses pressure variation with the first solar wind.

Runner-Up – MOMENTUM VIRIUM in L1 by Sergio Bianchi, Jonghak Kim, Simone Fracasso, Alejandro Jorge Velazco Ramirez

Image © Sergio Bianchi, Jonghak Kim, Simone Fracasso, Alejandro Jorge Velazco Ramirez

For the runner-up team, it was important that the Moon kept a significant meaning for us here on Earth. This is why they decided to base their Moontopia in the lunar orbit rather than on the surface of the Moon itself.

Image © Sergio Bianchi, Jonghak Kim, Simone Fracasso, Alejandro Jorge Velazco Ramirez

A space elevator links the man-made space-city with our beloved natural satellite: a sensitive and elegant solution which mixes poetry with science-fiction.

People’s Choice Award – MODULPIA by Alessandro Giorgi, Cai Feng, Siyuan PanEsteban Analuiza

Image © Alessandro Giorgi, Cai Feng, Siyuan PanEsteban Analuiza

The general public’s favourite entry is designed as a unique form. According to a so-called aggregation system Weair-Phelan structure, it gives shape to an expandable landscape which could accommodate Moon dwellers in relatively economical, sustainable and simple solutions.

Image © Alessandro Giorgi, Cai Feng, Siyuan PanEsteban Analuiza

Modular in nature, Modulpia could grow organically in time and, by employ bioregenerative strategies, it would be able to provide its own food, plants (for CO2 removal and oxygen production), and generate drinkable water from gray water.

Honourable Mention – PLATINUM CITY by Sean Thomas Allen

Image © Sean Thomas Allen

The fantastic graphics of this entry are equally matched by the extensive research which has given birth to its design. In its form alone, Platinum City is a fantasy-driven utopia.

Image © Sean Thomas Allen

In its research, it is a new extraterrestrial urban model based on cutting-edge science and technology available to us today. Could this be a vision of what mankind living on the Moon at a large-scale could actually look like?

Honourable Mention – UPSIDE DOWN by Ryan Tung Wai Yin, Ho Wing Tsit Teresina, Joshua Ho

Image © Ryan Tung Wai Yin, Ho Wing Tsit Teresina, Joshua Ho

There is clearly a lot of passion, thought and work behind this beautiful design. What makes this proposal so interesting is its phasing. In Upside Down, the design team set out a plan for interplanetary exploration and subsequent colonisation.

Image © Ryan Tung Wai Yin, Ho Wing Tsit Teresina, Joshua Ho

Their real objective: Mars! The Moon is cleverly used to gather experience and resources… a sort of test-training site for a bigger galactic goal.

Honourable Mention – WOMB by Prapatsorn Sukkaset, Saran Chamroonkul

Image © Prapatsorn Sukkaset, Saran Chamroonkul

Womb is an idea. A utopia. A retreat. But one which we can all buy into from time to time. In this design, the Moon becomes an almost ego-less meditation ground. An escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life on Earth which drowns our senses and generates stress.

Image © Prapatsorn Sukkaset, Saran Chamroonkul

In Womb, the Moon becomes a place of contemplation, where mankind can seek solace for deeper meanings in human consciousness. And for those times when meditation and contemplation is all but a little too much, then WOMB provides a space-motel catering for the perhaps more ‘animalistic’ human needs.

Honourable Mention – LOOKING THROUGH THE MOON by Yiling Chu, Yao Ding, Yan-Fei Jiang, Hui Tian

Image © Yiling Chu, Yao Ding, Yan-Fei Jiang, Hui Tian

If pioneering 19th and early 20th century town planners (think Ebenezer Howard’s Garden Cities for example) would have been catapulted to the contemporary time and asked to design their ideal city on the Moon, they would have designed this wonderful entry.

Image © Yiling Chu, Yao Ding, Yan-Fei Jiang, Hui Tian

Placed in a natural crater and given an atmosphere of its own thanks to a see-through canopy (called a Solar Dome), this Moontopia is a fully functional city designed to bring a bit of earthly comforts to the Moon.

Honourable Mention – LUNAR OASIS by Edward Chew

Image © Edward Chew

Lunar Oasis is a system of colonising barren and hostile territories such as the Moon. It is not built with the aim of establishing a static perfection, but rather designed to allow for natural processes to evolve in time.

Image © Edward Chew

Thanks to an emphasis on greenery and vegetation, Lunar Oasis is a biophilic sanctuary that reconnects lunar inhabitants back with Earthly nature and provides an alternative to the outside world of barren moonscape. In doing so, the oasis becomes a life-support for human life on the Moon.

Honourable Mention – THE AEROSPHERE by Stephanie Stiers

Image © Stephanie Stiers

In scale, the Aerosphere is a tiny shelter, the smallest of all of the Moontopias submitted through this competition. In concept, however, it is huge! This interpretation of Moontopia focuses on Space Tourism. It designs a one-person transportable pod-suit which acts as a life-support and companion for its user adapting and catering to his or her every need.

Image © Stephanie Stiers

With the Aerosphere, you become a lunar explorer, allowed to explore our satellite through a series of tourists routes set out on the Moon. Can’t you just imagine the likes of Richard Branson producing these fun little suites for his space tourists in a few years time?

Source and images Courtesy of Eleven.

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