Space Architecture: Designing Space Habitats for Human Experience with Michael Morris
In this episode of Extreme Living, Anchal speaks with space architect Michael Morris, whose work sits at the intersection of human habitation and space exploration.
Michael has spent nearly two decades working with NASA on the design of space habitats and is best known for the iconic Mars Ice House concept, a project that challenged the assumption that Martian habitats must be buried underground by proposing light, transparency, and psychological well-being as essential parts of safety.
Together, we explore what it means to design for places where there are no site visits, no traditional user groups, and no familiar precedent. Michael shares how architects can contribute to NASA’s engineering-led culture through listening, lateral thinking, and human-centered design. We discuss daylight, plants, color, views, privacy, conflict, sensory monotony, analog environments, and the question of how future habitats can support people not just as operators, but as human beings.
The conversation moves from Mars and the Moon to Earth-based lessons from HI-SEAS, Antarctic research stations, underwater habitats, and healthcare environments, asking how extreme environments can teach us to design better spaces here on Earth.
At its core, this episode asks: what does it really mean to live well in space?
Reference mentioned: NASA’s Moon-to-Mars Planetary Autonomous Construction Technology Project: Overview and Status by Raymond G. Clinton, Jr. et al. The paper discusses MMPACT, NASA’s effort to develop autonomous construction capabilities for lunar infrastructure, including landing pads, habitats, shelters, roadways, berms, and blast shields using lunar regolith-based materials.
https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20220013524