Your attendance at a Space Settlement Design Competition is part of a long history of Competitions involving thousands of students and teachers from across the globe.
Space Settlement Design Competitions are industry simulation games for high school students, set in the future.
The Competitions emulate, as closely as possible, the experience of working as a member of an aerospace industry proposal team. To help accomplish the challenging task of designing a space settlement, each team is provided with managers from industry in the United States, Australia, and India to serve as Company co-CEOs, then participants receive technical and management training to prepare them for the Competition. They must design an overall structure, define sources of construction materials, specify vehicles used for transportation, determine sources of electrical power and water, design computer and robotics systems, specify allocation of interior space, show examples of pleasant community design, and provide estimated costs and schedules for completion of the project.
The Competition concludes with the teams’ presentations of briefings describing their designs to a panel of judges. The experience of participating in a Space Settlement Design Competition teaches young people optimism for the future, technical competence, management skills, knowledge of space environments and resources, appreciation for relationships between technical products and human use, teamwork, and techniques for preparing effective documentation. It requires that students integrate their knowledge of and utilize skills in space science, physics, math, chemistry, environmental science, biology, computer science, writing, speaking, art, and common sense.
The Space Settlement Design Competition concept is sponsored by Aerospace Education Competitions, and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Houston (Texas) Section, with support from the National Space Society (NSS) in the United States. The winning Semi-Finalist team will select members to proceed to the Finalist Competition at NASA Kennedy Space Center in the USA in July.
The first Competition was held in Columbus, Ohio in 1984 as part of the Boy Scouts’ National Exploring Conference. Anita Gale, her husband, Dick Edwards, and their friend Rob Kolstad developed the concept and the intellectual materials and content for the initial competition.
Subsequently the Boy Scouts’ Space Exploration Post at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, CA decided to sponsor a local competition. It was called SpaceSet, and the first Competition at JPL occurred in 1986, and continued for 18 years.
A National Competition was founded in July, 1994, as part of Space Week International, and was held in Washington, DC, to great success. The National Competition moved to Epcot Center in 1995, and then to the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in 1996. It continued at KSC through 2005 and then moved to the Johnson Space Center (JSC) where it occurred each July from 2006 to 2013. In 2014 the National Competition was relocated to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, and the 2017 National Competition will be held there in late July, 2017. The National Competition is now called the International Space Settlement Design Competition and is attended by student groups from around the world, including the United States.
The first JSC Competition was organized in the spring of 1999 at the request of the JSC Center Director, and has continued at JSC since that time. There has been a JSC SSDC in the March time frame each year, and for some years there were two sessions in the spring to accommodate additional students. In 2012 there were two Competitions – one in March, 2012, and a second in October, 2012.
The initial focus of the Competition was on Mars Exploration – a base in orbit about Mars, on the Martian surface, or a cycling resupply vehicle to travel repetitively between Earth and Mars to resupply existing assets at Mars. The Competition has now expanded its focus to include designing large human facilities in the inner solar system, including Earth’s Moon, Mars, Venus, Mercury, and the Asteroid Belt.
There is now also an on-line Competition that any school in the world can enter and compete for an opportunity to attend the International Space Settlement Design Competition at Kennedy Space Center each July. A subset of the members of the winning company from a JSC Competition is invited to travel to the NASA Kennedy Space Center in late July to participate in the International Competition.