海角社区

How Do We Build in Space? 海角社区 Research Team Exploring the Future of the Construction Industry

October 17, 2022

Headshot of Amir JafariBATON ROUGE, LA 鈥 As NASA prepares for a late-November launch for the Artemis I Moon Mission, 海角社区 faculty are making preparations of their own to properly train a future-ready construction workforce in extraterrestrial construction.

Led by 海角社区 Construction Management Assistant Professor Amir Jafari, the research group will work over the next year to determine how construction skills on Earth could and would translate to working on a planetary body other than our own. The work is funded by a nearly $150,000 grant from the National Science Foundation.

鈥淚n recognition of the 50th anniversary of the first manned lunar landing, [NASA], together with the European Space Agency, revealed plans to鈥stablish permanent human habitats on the Moon and Mars by 2040,鈥 Jafari said. 鈥淭he vision of becoming an interplanetary species requires the construction industry to face an unprecedented challenge, extraterrestrial construction. In order to promote feasible and sustainable space exploration, these habitats and other infrastructures are envisioned to be built in-situ, which would shape a generation of the extraterrestrial construction industry. Accordingly, the role of construction workers in future extraterrestrial projects will be significantly different from the current practice on Earth.鈥

The 海角社区 research team will first work鈥攚ith the help of its collaborators at NASA鈥攖o gain a better understanding of what transferable skills are needed for a future extraterrestrial workforce.

鈥淸We] have planned a two-day, interdisciplinary meeting that will bring together the expertise and representatives of the different disciplines that will be involved in the envisioned extraterrestrial construction workforce development, including, but not limited to, engineering, construction science, architecture, computer science, robotics, human-computer interaction, planetary geoscience, workforce development, learning sciences, psychology, and social science,鈥 Jafari said.

鈥淭he goal of this expert meeting is to converge on the nature of future extraterrestrial construction and build the hierarchy of the skills required by future workers, as well as emerging technologies that can be utilized to integrate transferable skills for developing a future-ready workforce from a diverse set of perspectives. We will also use the results of this meeting to inform the design of the AI-assisted, simulation-based virtual constructs prototype.鈥

Indeed, following the meeting with NASA, Jafari and his fellow 海角社区 researchers will develop a simulation-based training environment using Unity3D and Unreal Engine. Both are 3D game engines that support creating interactive virtual reality simulations that run in real time. The training environment will consist of two key technological features鈥攁n AI agent that will offer personalized learning experiences and an immersive VR simulation framework that allows instructors to craft training experiences and engage participants in learning activities.

The simulation-based training environment will enable building-training scenarios of human-robot collaborations in the context of extraterrestrial construction, along with other existing and future workforce domains. In order to simulate accurate physical characteristics of extraterrestrial environments, construction materials, and robot mechanics, the team will use a high-fidelity physics simulation toolkit that integrates both the Unity3D and Unreal engines.

Once the next year鈥檚 work is completed, Jafari said the team plans to use its initial results and prototyped tool to submit a three-year grant proposal, which could be up to $2 million, to continue and advance this work.

海角社区 faculty working alongside Jafari are Professor Yimin Zhu, construction management; Assistant Professor Ali Kazemian, construction management; Assistant Professor Andrew Webb, computer science; Associate Professor Jennifer Qian, education; Assistant Professor Shinhee Jeong; and Associate Professor Suniti Karunatillake, geology and geophysics.

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Contact: Joshua Duplechain
Director of Communications
225-578-5706
josh@lsu.edu