Interstellar travel has been one of planet Earth’s grandest achievements in modern history. To send people and entire laboratories beyond Earth’s atmosphere is an unfathomably complex and challenging accomplishment; the logistics and engineering alone took decades to execute, and even now, it remains problematic. The risks involved with space travel are immense: rocket failures such as that in Columbia, hull breaches, or simple miscalculations that may result in numerous deaths and severe casualties. For much of its history, space travel has emphasized practicality, economics, and engineering, leaving little room to design an environment supporting those in orbit. While engineering, finances, and feasibility reign as the highest priorities in space habitation, there is an often overlooked necessity to design environments that better address station inhabitants' mental and behavioral needs.
Details
- Space Architecture: Improving Psychological Support Aboard the International Space Station Through Design
- Mizuba, Logan (Author)
- Horton, Philip (Thesis director)
- Finn, Ed (Committee member)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- The Design School (Contributor)
- Watts College of Public Service & Community Solut (Contributor)