Could Architecture In Space Make A Greener Earth?

Could Architecture In Space Make A Greener Earth?

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  • Episode
      1401
  • Published
      16. dec. 2025
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16M
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Engelsk
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Humankind has the technology to go to space. Space architect Ariel Ekblaw says the bottleneck now is real estate: getting larger volumes of space stations in orbit. Her company is working on the equivalent of giant, magnetic space Legos—hexagons that could self-assemble in space into livable, workable structures. This episode, host Regina G. Barber talks to her about this space architecture and why she says that the goal isn’t to abandon Earth–but to off-world industries like agriculture and manufacturing in order to build a better Earth.

If you liked this episode, check out our Space Camp series.

Interested in more space tech episodes? Email us your question at shortwave@npr.org.

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