The Museum’s Home Beyond Earth exhibit expands its orbit and offers a futuristic life-size space station module.
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Ted Huetter/Senior Public Relations Manager
T: 206.768.7105 C: 206.455.5360 Email: thuetter@museumofflight.org

 

Wide shot of inside white 20-foot tall geodesic dome with four people standing inside.

Museum Opens Space Habitat Pavilion Sept. 28

Space station module lets visitors walk into the future of living in orbit

 

SEATTLE, Sept. 9, 2024—On Sept. 28, the Museum’s Home Beyond Earth exhibit expands its orbit and invites visitors to enter a futuristic life-size space station module—the TESSERAE Space Habitat Pavilion. The 20-feet high dome pavilion is a full-scale mock-up of the TESSERAE self-assembling space habitat designed to sustain and enrich life in orbit. Created in Cambridge, Mass. by Aurelia Institute, the TESSERAE module at the Museum will highlight food cultivation, cooking and the importance of shared meals in maintaining people's well-being in space. This will be the first public exhibition of TESSERAE, which will be open in the Museum’s Great Gallery until Jan. 12, 2025.

 

"TESSERAE represents a new way of thinking about space habitat design," said Ariel Ekblaw, CEO and Co-Founder of Aurelia Institute. "We're moving beyond early space stations' confined, utilitarian spaces. Our vision is to create expandable, reconfigurable habitats that can grow with the mission needs.”

 

“We’re thrilled to have the TESSERAE Pavilion as part of our Home Beyond Earth exhibit and for our visitors to experience this groundbreaking concept at real scale,” said Geoff Nunn, Adjunct Curator for Space History and exhibit developer at The Museum of Flight.

 

TESSERAE Exhibit Details

Visitors to the Pavilion will experience a full-scale, 20-foot by 24-foot mock-up of a TESSERAE module. 

 

TESSERAE (Tessellated Electromagnetic Space Structures for the Exploration of Reconfigurable, Adaptive Environments) is a self-assembling space habitat concept designed to expand living space in orbit. The structure consists of electromagnetically connected hexagonal and pentagonal tiles that can be flat-packed for launch and autonomously assembled in space. The TESSERAE platform is designed to be modular and customizable, allowing for interior living space optimized for comfort and community rather than basic survival.

 

“Larger and more adaptable environments will support a broader range of scientific and commercial activities and provide the comforts of home, fostering long-term human presence in space,” said Aurelia Institute CEO Ariel Ekblaw. “These elements will be essential as the human population working and living in space becomes more diverse and expansive."

 

The concept of breaking bread in space is central to the exhibit, and Aurelia Institute has designed specific features highlighting the importance of food and communal dining in maintaining people's well-being in space. One of these is the "Green Vault," an aeroponics system for growing fresh produce in microgravity, a potential solution for future space inhabitants to cultivate their own food. Visitors can also observe a functional zero-gravity sous vide cooker and fermentation orbs showcasing approaches to nutritious and flavorful food prep in weightless environments.

 

Beyond the food-related features, TESSERAE showcases other crucial aspects of space living. Visitors will see storage solutions inspired by nature. Algae-filled panels that look like stained glass demonstrate a potential method for generating breathable air. And to address moving and even relaxing in zero gravity, sea anemone-inspired inflatables and hand-knotted nets provide both functional and aesthetically pleasing solutions for navigation within the habitat.

 

Aurelia Institute is a nonprofit space architecture R&D lab, education and outreach center, and policy hub dedicated to building humanity’s future in space.

 

Image: Visitors inside of the full-scale TESSERAE module. Photo courtesy Aurelia Institute.

Garden527 at 260

Let's Eat

The TESSERAE Pavilion showcases the interior of its proposed geodesic spacecraft, designed around the theme of “breaking bread” in space. Interior kitchen elements address the unique design constraints and affordances of “zero gravity” including an aeroponics garden and methods of holding ingredients. 

    Green Ovals260

    Thinking Green

    The TESSERAE Pavilion showcases the interior of its proposed geodesic spacecraft, designed around the theme of “breaking bread” in space. Green-tinged ‘bubble’ chambers surround a view of Earth from orbit, meant to house algae and cyanobacteria as part of habitat life support systems.

    Decorative Home Beyond Earth logo

    Home Beyond Earth

    Open through Jan. 20, 2025

    The Home Beyond Earth exhibit is entirely new and created by The Museum of Flight as an immersive experience in three galleries with a focus on the past, present and future of space stations and living in orbit around the Earth.

     

    Home Beyond Earth displays over fifty artifacts, models, space-flown objects and uniforms. Large digital projections enliven the galleries with photos, videos and vintage space art. 

     

    Digital “passport” cards allow visitors to personalize their journey through the exhibit and build an imagined life in a space station of their choice. The exhibit is included with Museum general admission.

    Home Beyond Earth Info

    Looking for astonishing aviation and space age images, videos and documents for your story? Check out the Museum’s extensive and ever-growing Online Digital Collections!

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    Founded in 1965, the independent, nonprofit Museum of Flight is one of the largest air and space museums in the world, annually serving over 600,000 visitors. The Museum's collection includes more than 160 historically significant airplanes and spacecraft, from the first fighter plane (1914) to today's 787 Dreamliner. Attractions at the 23-acre, 5-building Seattle campus include the original Boeing Company factory, the NASA Space Shuttle Trainer, Air Force One, Concorde, Lockheed Blackbird and Apollo Moon rockets. In addition to the Seattle campus adjacent to King County International Airport, the Museum also has its 3-acre Restoration Center and Reserve Collection at Paine Field in Everett (not currently open to the public).

     

    With a foundation of aviation history, the Museum is also a hub of news and dialogue with leaders in the emerging field of private spaceflight ventures. The Museum's aviation and space library and archives are the largest on the West Coast. More than 150,000 individuals are served annually by the Museum's onsite and outreach educational programs. The Museum of Flight is accredited by the American Association of Museums, and is an Affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution.

     

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    The Museum of Flight is located at 9404 E. Marginal Way S., Seattle, Exit 158 off Interstate 5 on Boeing Field halfway between downtown Seattle and Sea-Tac Airport. The Museum is open every day from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Museum admission for adults is $26. Youth 5 through 17 are $18, youth 4 and under are free. Seniors 65 and over $22. Groups of ten or more: $20 per adult, $13 per youth, $18 per senior. Admission is free from 5:00 to 9:00 p.m. on the first Thursday of every month. The Museum offers free quarterly Sensory Day programs, $3 admission through the Museums for All program, plus military and other discounts. Parking is always free. There is a full lunch menu café operated by McCormick & Schmick's. For general Museum information, please call 206-764-5720 or visit www.museumofflight.org.

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