1.2.19

Living on Mars through 3D Printing

Five teams have won the latest stage of NASA’s competition for habitations that can be 3D-printed on Mars.

The designs for the third phase of the Habitat Centennial Challenge, which began back in 2014, required teams to construct Building Information Models, or BIMs, of the habitats to prove that they would function in Martian conditions – as far as these are understood.
This means developing detailed designs for structures large enough to allow four people to live there for a year.
The BIMs will also have to take into account pressure resistance, heating and thermal insulation, structural strength, air filtration and energy generation.


Zopherus project

The winning design was from Zopherus, an Arkansas-based team that plans to print its modules inside a large lander.
The idea is to have the lander crawl around the surface of the planet until it finds a level site. It then deploys rover robots to test the surface. When suitable materials are found, the lander seals itself to the ground to create a pressurised chamber.
When complete, it rises and moves a short distance to create another, a process that resembles a chicken laying an egg.


Al SpaceFactory project

The second-placed design is by AI SpaceFactory from New York.
Its Marsha (MARS HAbitat) is aimed at handling the difference between internal and external pressure – the Martian atmosphere is thought to be about one hundredth of the density of Earth’s.
It envisages a vertical egg-like container with a double shell and a minimal footprint. One advantage of the shape is that it avoids the need to move the printer in between modules.
The design would be made from a reinforced type of thermoplastic called PLA, which is recyclable has lowest coefficient of thermal expansion among plastics.
The ground floor features marsha’s wet laboratory in addition to the majority of its mechanical, electrical and plumbing equipment
Source : designboom


Marsha’s two-shell structure creates flexible, hybrid spaces which offer a variety of lighting conditions, privacy, noise levels and uses
Source : designboom




18.1.19

An Egg for Free Silver

The Cunning Republican Scheme
Louis Dalrymple
Chromolithograph
Pub.: Keppler & Schwarzmann, 1898 April 13
from Puck magazine


Jennings Bryan is a goose flapping his wings and squawking, perched on a nest with a large egg labeled "Free Silver 16 to 1", at his feet is a bowl of food labeled "Republican Non-Interference with the Money Question"; in the background, Mark Hanna and William McKinley are standing behind a gate that leads to the White House.

Caption: Chairman Hanna - We must be careful not to take that food away from him. We wouldn't be nearly so sure of our jobs without those eggs.

15.1.19

Eggs for Ballet

Schwanen Trilogie
Darrel Toulon
Handlungsballett
Graz Opera, Austria, 2009


[...] The stage is all dark as huge eggs are rolled in. From the eggs emerge dancers as swans born adult. [...

[...] The three stories chosen by Toulon include Leda and the Swan, where Zeus comes to Leda in the form of a swan and ravishes her.
A Finish fairy tale, Lemminkäinen in Tuonela, tells the story of Lemminkäinen seeking the hand of a swan maiden (Sibelius, Lemminkäinen in Tuonela).
Finally, Toulon approaches ballet’s mountain in Swan terms – Odette/Odile (Swan Lake, Tschaikowsky). [...]

11.1.19

Egg-Foot

Egg-foot in Liverpool


Egg-foot in Manchester United

By Astrid Løyning, on @astridloyningskunstside