Sustaining human life on Mars is becoming a real consideration for NASA.
So real, in fact, that they are awarding $2.25 million to the winners of the 3D Printed Habitat Challenge, a design-build competition that considers the possibilities of 3D printing a suitable human habitat on Mars. The contest, co-sponsored by America Makes, asked participants to design a structure that could be used on Mars by 2035.
The move toward 3D printing as a solution for architecture on Mars is due to a number of challenges NASA faces in getting to and building on the red planet. Delivering conventional building materials aboard a spacecraft traveling to Mars would weigh too much and be prohibitively expensive. Using 3D printing technologies with Martian indigenous materials should save on weight and costāto the point where habitation finally becomes feasible.
The challenge then becomes how to build on a planet that has temperatures below 0 degrees Celsius for most of the year, a third of the gravity of earth, and (most importantly) a lack of atmosphere that would require any structure to be heavily pressurized.
Mueller, who works on 3D printing buildings along their stress lines rather than in horizontal layers, and Lavallee, who works with new thermoplastic composite materials, were able to combine their expertise to design a 3D printer that shapes the composite material with fiberglass to solidify and form the architectural structure.
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