Vittorio Netti
Space Architect | System Engineer
Vittorio Netti
Space Architect | System Engineer
Design
ISRU
Mission Architecture
Robotics
Space Architecture
June 2023
June 2023

MoonFiber | Fiber-regolith reinforced lavatube outpost

Vittorio Netti
Alessandro Angione
Ivana Fuscello
Paolo Mangili
Isabella Paradiso

The recent efforts to return to the lunar surface embodied by the development of the Artemis program include the concept of achieving a permanent stay, enabled by ISRU technologies that didn’t exist at the time of the Apollo Program; Moonfiber is a project for the construction of a settlement located in a lunar Lava Tube. This choice is determined by the need to exploit a place with characteristics suitable for human permanence in the long term, achieving a balance between safety and relative construction economy. The Moon is a hostile environment, seemingly devoid of blatant resources, subject to the most destructive events in the solar system, such as the constant bombardment of both micrometeorites and radiation, as well as occasional solar storms. The project finds full realization, in its working and living functional divisions, below the lunar surface, while the areas used for ISRU, 3D printing, payload unloading, and energy production operations are located near the entrance of the Lava Tube, to which they connect via a main logistic axis. The main structure, built in the Lava Tube, is made up of a series of inflatable modules held suspended in the center of the gallery by a mesh of composite material fibers obtained through extrusion and winding of regolith fiber. The weaving technique of the supporting structure becomes the turning point regarding the architectural composition of the settlement because it makes everything light and parameterized based on the morphology of the place, which is subject to an automated preliminary scan by robots performing as an avant-garde fleet, extrapolating the optimized topology underlying the definition of the framework of the system. This structure is initially defined by its anchorages to the Lava Tube walls, to which the upper and lower load-bearing fibers are connected, on which rests a mesh, also in fiber, which performs the function of a suspended base for the inflatable modules. The construction technique is based on the processing of the fiber filament. the goal is to obtain the filament from the lunar regolith, adaptable in composition with different quantities and types of yarn, from glass to carbon fiber; the production process of such coils of fiber is described here.

Outpost construction sequence

The image shows the MoonFiber outpost construction sequence:

1. The rovers explore the lavatube
2. The lavatube is completely mapped
3. The construction equipment gets unloaded from the lander
4. Excavator rovers unload regolith into the furnace
5. The regolith faber cables get laid out
6. The firsts modules are loaded onto the fiber net
7. The modules are berthed together
8. The modules are inflated
9. The rovers are used to anchor the modules onto the fiber net

The main structure, built in the Lava Tube, is made up of a series of inflatable modules detached from the dirty lunar surface and held suspended in the center of the gallery by a mesh of composite material fibres.

Some of the robotic assets used in the construction process

The weaving technique of the supporting structure becomes the turning point, as regards the architectural composition of the settlement because it makes everything light and parameterized based on the morphology of the place. This constructive flexibility makes the project adaptable to several potential sites, subject to an automated preliminary scan by robots, which perform an avant-garde function, inspecting the morphology of a given site and extrapolating the optimized topology underlying the definition of the framework of the system. This structure is initially defined by its anchorages to the Lava Tube walls, to which the upper and lower load-bearing fibers are connected, on which rests a mesh, also in fiber, which performs the function of a suspended base for the inflatable modules.
The same technique is also used for fixing the inflatables, according to an algorithm that generates a weave over the entire surface of the module. It creates protection, reinforcement, but above all it remains in line with the rest of the project by integrating the housing modules with the main structure. The entire complex consists of 8 inflatable modules:

– Gym
– Guest accommodation (2 levels)
– Staff accommodation (2 levels)
– Common areas (2 levels)
– Dashboard
– Hydroponics Facility
– Workshops
– Infirmary

Furthermore, 2 node modules perform a connection function both at the level of the suspended housing complex, with doors positioned radially at 120-degree angles, and between the surface and the habitat.

General Plan of the lavatube outpost