Title: A Mission Statement for Space Architecture

Authors: Jan Osburg, Constance Adams, Brent Sherwood

Publication Details: Proceedings of the 33th International Conference on Environmental Systems, Vancouver, 7 - 10 July 2003. Published by the Societey of Automotive Engineers as SAE-2003-01-2431.

Language: English

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Abstract

In an effort to define and advance the new discipline of Space Architecture, the AIAA technical subcommittee on Aerospace Architecture organized a Space Architecture Workshop that took place during the World Space Congress 2002 in Houston, Texas. One of the results of this workshop is a "Mission Statement for Space Architecture" that addresses the following core issues in a concise manner: definition, motivation, utility, required knowledge, and related disciplines. The mission statement, which was unanimously adopted by the workshop participants, reads as follows:

"Space Architecture is the theory and practice of designing and building inhabited environments in outer space, responding to the deep human drive to explore and occupy new places. Architecture organizes and integrates the creation and enrichment of built environments. Designing for space requires specialized knowledge of orbital mechanics, propulsion, weightlessness, hard vacuum, psychology of hermetic environments, and other topics. Space Architecture has complementary relationships with diverse fields such as aerospace engineering, terrestrial architecture, transportation design, medicine, human factors, space science, law, and art."

The paper documents the genesis of this mission statement, expands on key issues, and covers additional related topics.

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This page was last updated on 17 November 2006. To contact me, send e-mail to jan.osburg@asdl.gatech.edu.