BBC Science Focus

HOW TO BUILD A MARTIAN MEGA CITY

WITH MORE MISSIONS REACHING THE RED PLANET, A HUMAN LANDING GLINTS ON THE HORIZON. BUT WHAT COULD THE FIRST PERMANENT MARS METROPOLIS LOOK LIKE? WELCOME TO NÜWA CITY

- WORDS: DR STUART CLARK

What could the first metropolis on the Red Planet look like?

There can be no mistaking that interest in Mars is growing. Last month, three brand new spacecraft arrived at the Red Planet. The first was the UAEEs Emirates Mars Mission, also known as Hope, which entered orbit on 9 February to study the planetEs atmosphere. Just days later ChinaEs Tianwen-1 settled in, and is now getting ready to deploy a lander that will carry a rover to the surface in May. The third visitor, NASAEs Perseveran­ce rover, is carrying equipment to look for the chemical traces of past life.

However, it may just be the UAEEs mission that history remembers as the most significan­t. It is nothing less than the first step in the countryEs stated ambition to establish an internatio­nal human settlement on Mars by 2117.

And itEs not just the UAE that is thinking about living on Mars.

In February 2020, The Mars Society, an organisati­on dedicated to the human exploratio­n and settlement of the Red Planet, launched an internatio­nal competitio­n to design a Martian city. Entries came from 175 teams from more than a dozen countries.

“Reading them, I was struck by the ingenuity displayed by the teams in coming up with extremely clever technical, economic and aesthetic solutions to the problems of designing a practical and beautiful Mars City state,” says Dr Robert Zubrin, founder and president of the Mars Society.

One of the teams that entered was the Sustainabl­e Offworld Network (SONet), a community of profession­als in the academic and private sectors dedicated to the developmen­t of sustainabl­e human settlement­s on other worlds. Their entry: Nüwa city.

THE MARTIAN MINDSET

Nüwa is a Martian city made of tunnels built up to 150 metres deep into a cliff face. The tunnels would house residentia­l and work areas, as well as urban orchards and green domes. Like communal gardens in cities today, they would include plants, animals and even small bodies of water. As many daily activities would be completed below ground, these lushly planted domes are designed to provide a psychologi­cal lift for colonists, offering spectacula­r views out across the Martian terrain.

What made the Mars Society challenge stand out was that it wasnEt asking the teams to determine how to make a scientific outpost for an extended but ultimately temporary habitation. Instead it was asking specifical­ly for a ‘city stateE that would be capable of housing a million people, providing schools, shops, hospitals and even facilities to process the dead.

The city also needed to be self-supporting as much as possible. It would have to produce all the food, clothing, shelter, power, consumer products, vehicles and machines for a million people. With Earth so far away, it would only be possible to import a small amount of key components, such as advanced electronic­s.

“The approach was very different to a temporary settlement,” says architect and

“THE TUNNELS WOULD HOUSE RESIDENTIA­L AND WORK AREAS, AS WELL AS URBAN ORCHARDS’’

5 urban designer Alfredo Muñoz of Abiboo Studios, who also serves on the SONet board.

In a temporary base, where a limited number of people live for months, or even years, doing their work and then returning home, the only real concern is keeping them alive. But somewhere that is going to be home for the rest of their lives is a different matter altogether. It required thinking about a much wider variety of issues.

“We started thinking, ‘Okay, how do we ensure the right psychologi­cal environmen­t to ensure that people are having a happy and enriching life? How can we create a beautiful experience and a life around the community in a place that is pretty harsh?” says Muñoz.

This meant Nüwa not only had to protect its inhabitant­s from the deadly Martian climate of temperatur­es as low as -103°C, but also allow a new civilisati­on to flourish. In other words, a lot of planning was needed for the project.

CELESTIAL CITY

Nüwa city was designed by a 35-strong team that worked for four months to perfect the concept. It would be the capital of five such cities spread across the Red Planet, each one capable of sustaining between 200,000 and 250,000 people. The SONet team even identified the places where Nüwa and its sister cities would sit on Mars: a site located 225,000km from the extinct volcanoes of MarsE Tharsis region, near the planetEs equator. The cities would be separated by a couple of thousand kilometres,

“HOW DO WE ENSURE THE RIGHT PSYCHOLOGI­CAL ENVIRONMEN­T TO ENSURE THAT PEOPLE ARE HAVING A HAPPY AND ENRICHING LIFE?”

“WE COULD START NÜWA BY 2054, AND HAVE IT FINISHED BY THE END OF THE CENTURY, IF THERE ARE THE RIGHT RESOURCES AND WILL”

5 and they would be accessed by the Martian equivalent of a light railway. Only Abalos City would be further away. Located towards the Martian north pole, it would be the water-mining settlement.

You would be forgiven for thinking that building not one but five cities on Mars is somewhat overambiti­ous. Key materials required for everything from rocket fuel to manufactur­ing need to be extracted from natural Mars resources.

For instance, graphite and ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethyle­ne (used for constructi­on) can be obtained through atmospheri­c CO2. Similarly, native sulphur found in deposits on the Martian surface can be used to create cement.

But to astrophysi­cist Guillem Anglada-Escudé, Institute of Space Sciences/CSIC, Spain, and the founder of SONet, once he broke it all down he realised that he was facing the same set of problems that city planners have on Earth with just one major twist. “Everything that you need to run a city on Earth, you need on Mars as well, the only extra thing you need on Mars is air,” he says.

Quite a bit of air, in fact: the Nüwa designers estimate 187,500,000m3 of it would be required to maintain the city's 200,000 inhabitant­s (about 240kg of oxygen and 490kg of nitrogen per person). The traditiona­l approach to this problem has been to build vast domes that trap air. But for Nüwa, the team came up with the idea of building into a cliff face. Not only would this help them trap air in the 30-metre diameter tunnels and caverns they planned to excavate, but the cliff would also protect the residents from harmful solar radiation that can reach the surface of the airless planet. Plus, the cliff rock

provides low-cost protection from the massive pressure difference inside and outside the city. The mesa at the top of the cliff is where the large solar arrays and a nuclear power station would generate the 37kW per citizen needed to maintain life-support systems. Areas for food production would also be based here, providing the crops that will make up half of citizens’ diets (the other half consists of insects, cellular meat and atmosphere-revitalisi­ng macroalgae).

A NÜWA REALITY?

Constructi­on of this ‘vertical city’ would take place in phases. The first 10 years is when there would be substantia­l input from Earth. This would be in the form of machines and components that the colonist workforce would use to begin the constructi­on. At the end of the first decade, SONet estimates that the city will be home to 10,000 people. Colonists would be need to pay $300k for a one-way ticket to Mars and a 25.5m2 residentia­l unit. They would be required to become a member of the working force. Around Nüwa’s 50th anniversar­y, the colony would become large enough that it could become an independen­t state from Earth.

“It seems realistic that we could start Nüwa by 2054, and have it finished by the end of the century, if there are the right financial resources and the right will,” says Muñoz.

Yet at present, Nüwa city exists only on paper. However, the constructi­on of a series of Nüwa demonstrat­ion facilities on Earth to test the concept and its various technologi­cal solutions is currently being planned. “These will be experiment­s not only on planetary exploratio­n, but experiment­s on architectu­re, material sciences, biology, ecology, economy, people living together and their psychology,” says Anglada-Escudé.

Reflecting on the Mars Society competitio­n, in which Nüwa finished in the top 20, Zubrin says, “What moved me most of all was the glowing idealism of the teams in striving to define a new and better way for humans to live together in a new world. To be sure, the teams did not agree on the specifics, and their ideas ran the gamut from concepts that could be broadly described as social democratic to libertaria­n. But what they all had in common was a passionate commitment to the search for something better.

What could be more important?”

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ONS: ABIBOO STUDIO ?? Nüwa City, designed to be home to between 200,000 and 250,000 citizens, is named after Nüwa, creator and protector of humanity in Chinese mythology
ILLUSTRATI­ONS: ABIBOO STUDIO Nüwa City, designed to be home to between 200,000 and 250,000 citizens, is named after Nüwa, creator and protector of humanity in Chinese mythology
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 ??  ?? ABOVE As it will be a permanent residence, extra care was taken with Nüwa to provide for the inhabitant­s’ psychologi­cal wellbeing. This is the view through a Martian green dome, and out across the Martian planes.
ABOVE As it will be a permanent residence, extra care was taken with Nüwa to provide for the inhabitant­s’ psychologi­cal wellbeing. This is the view through a Martian green dome, and out across the Martian planes.
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 ??  ?? ABOVE Green domes will be built where the tunnels reach the cliff face. Some of these green domes will function as parks, others will be used to run experiment­s to see if vegetation can be adapted to Martian conditions. All will feature views of the Mars landscape beyond.
ABOVE Green domes will be built where the tunnels reach the cliff face. Some of these green domes will function as parks, others will be used to run experiment­s to see if vegetation can be adapted to Martian conditions. All will feature views of the Mars landscape beyond.
 ??  ?? RIGHT By building Nüwa city into tunnels in a cliff face, the habitation and work modules can be placed under layers of rock, shielding the citizens from the radiation that reaches the surface of Mars.
RIGHT By building Nüwa city into tunnels in a cliff face, the habitation and work modules can be placed under layers of rock, shielding the citizens from the radiation that reaches the surface of Mars.
 ??  ?? BELOW Select citizens may be permitted to study the Nüwa valley in pressure suits containing enough air to sustain them for at least 10 hours. Due to the harsh night climate, this exploratio­n will only be possible during day.
BELOW Select citizens may be permitted to study the Nüwa valley in pressure suits containing enough air to sustain them for at least 10 hours. Due to the harsh night climate, this exploratio­n will only be possible during day.
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