EGU2020-18245, updated on 12 Jun 2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-18245
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Semi-privacy and Color Application as Elements of Habitability in Concept Designs for Extra-terrestrial Habitation

Sabrina Kerber1,2, Ariane Wanske2, Michaela Musilova2,3,4, and Bernard Foing2,5,6
Sabrina Kerber et al.
  • 1International Moonbase Alliance (IMA), United States
  • 2ILEWG EuroMoonMars programme & EMMIHS (EuroMoonMars-International Moonbase Alliance- HISEAS),
  • 3International Moonbase Alliance (IMA) & Hawai´i Space Exploration Analog and Simulations (HI-SEAS), United States
  • 4Institute of Robotics and Cybernetics, Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology STU in Bratislava, Slovakia, Slovak Organisation for Space Activities (SOSA), Bratislava, Slovakia
  • 5Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands
  • 6ESA ESTEC & ILEWG, Noordwijk, the Netherlands

Introduction
Concepts for designs of extra-terrestrial habitats are experiencing a growing importance in the space industry. New technologies and innovative materials bring the need for novel spatial arrangements in these habitats. Two of the most important components to improve habitability in extra-terrestrial habitats - the situation of privacy and color application - have been addressed in a lunar simulation (EMMIHS-II) at the Hawai´i Space Exploration Analog and Simulations (HI-SEAS) habitat. This analog astronaut mission was initiated by the European Space Agency’s (ESA) EuroMoonMars (EMM) and International Lunar Exploration Working Group (ILEWG) in cooperation with the International MoonBase Alliance (IMA).
The question of how much privacy is necessary to create a liveable environment in an extra-terrestrial habitat has engaged space architects for the last decades. [1] The same keen interest has been attributed to the importance of color in guiding architectural conceptions in the often colour-less environment of outer space. [2] 
Less attention has been paid to the issue of semi-private space. Past analog astronaut missions at the HI-SEAS facility came across not only a lack of private space but also a scarcity of areas crew members could retreat to without completely leaving the common space. [2] Such semi-private areas bear great potential both from a spatial and psychological point of view.

Methodology
The research results presented here are based on several experiments conducted during the EMMIHS-II lunar simulation at the HI-SEAS Mars/Moon Research Facility.Potential benefits on crew cohesion, work effectiveness and personal mood were studied through setting up a semi-private area and assessing its use by the crew.
Further experiments investigated the analog astronauts’ reaction to disparate color situations inside the habitat and this semi-private space.
The findings will serve as a basis for future architectural design concepts in extra-terrestrial habitats and also offer the potential for further investigations during future analog missions.

Acknowledgements
First, we would like to thank our fellow EMMIHS-II crew members (M. Musilova, A. J. D’Angelo, A. P. Castro de Paula Nunes, C.R. Pouwels) and the EMMIHS-II mission sponsors. In addition, our gratitude goes out to the HI-SEAS Mission Control, ground support at ESA/ESTEC and the ILEWG EuroMoonMars manager, Prof. B. H. Foing, for enabling this research.

 

References
[1] K. Kennedy, S. Capps (2000). Designing Space Habitation. Space 2000. 10.1061/40479(204)6.
[2] I. Schlacht, H. Birke (2011). Space design: Visual interface of space habitats. Personal and Ubiquitous Computing. 15. 497-509. 10.1007/s00779-010-0326-4.
[3] S. Häuplik-Meusburger, K. Binsted et al (2017). Habitability Studies and Full Scale Simulation Research: Preliminary themes following HISEAS mission IV.
[4] Musilova, M., Rogers, H., Foing, B.H. et al (2019). EMM IMA HI-SEAS campaign February 2019. EPSC-DPS2019-1152.
[5] EuroMoonMars Instruments, Research, Field Campaigns and Activities 2017-2019. Foing, B.H., EuroMoonMars 2018-2019 Team. 2019 LPI Contrib. No. 3090.

How to cite: Kerber, S., Wanske, A., Musilova, M., and Foing, B.: Semi-privacy and Color Application as Elements of Habitability in Concept Designs for Extra-terrestrial Habitation, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-18245, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-18245, 2020

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