
Swedish artist Mikael Genberg, known for pushing boundaries with extraordinary ideas, teamed up with seasoned space engineer Emil Vinterhav to accomplish what many believed was impossible: sending a traditional Swedish red house, complete with space-qualified red paint, to the Moon.
After 25 years of relentless persistence, extensive testing, and sheer ingenuity – including developing a unique ceramic paint in Mikael’s own kitchen – the dream finally became a reality. Their "Moonhouse" is now officially en route to the lunar surface, having launched aboard a recent SpaceX mission in collaboration with Japan’s iSpace.
In just 28 days, humanity’s first lunar house will softly touch down. Whether it lands upright on its base or upside down on its roof remains a big question.
Epic achievement or wasted effort – your thoughts?
https://www.buzzsprout.com/1915816/episodes/17119351
11 Comments
So we are just throwing junk onto the moon now?
You could have launched a canvas painting there for all the impact it’ll have. We need infrastructure, not a fucking art installation
I’m so proud to live in an era where we can fly-tip on the moon now too :3
This is what happens when you push STEAM instead of STEM
I am not sure how much art costs to create but I just don’t get it.
What is this, a house for moon ants? (12 cm length)
But, why? There’s already enough junk going up.
What’s next? Putting a Tesla in orbit around the sun?
“25 years of relentless persistence and sheer ingenuity”
“pushing boundaries with extraordinary ideas”
“what many believed was impossible”
the house: https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/66af52c075b3bf3e8764e280/5ed5a5ea-b7f1-42c9-a038-6f6b5c1e43a5/The_Moonhouse_ispace2.jpg?format=1500w
It’s a tiny model used as a balancing mass on the spacecraft.
When space agencies do this, such as the Lego figures NASA sent to Jupiter, this is the reason. They need to add more mass to balance the centre of mass along the line of thrust, so they might as well do something significant if they can.
No they haven’t.
My thoughts: clickbait bollocks.