Via ABIBOOScience & Tech / NewsScience & Tech / NewsInside the first self-sustainable city on Mars, ready for humans in 2100Construction of the city of Nüwa will begin in 2054, and will see 250,000 people live inside the rock of a steep cliffShareLink copied ✔️March 23, 2021March 23, 2021Text Brit Dawson Nüwa, the first self-sustainable city on Mars Freeze my body, melt me in 80 years, and send me to Mars. Architecture studio ABIBOO has revealed its plans to create the first self-sustainable city on the Red Planet, which is set to be ready for residents in 2100. The city will be called Nüwa, and will be located at Tempe Mensa on one of the Martian cliffs. Its position inside of a rock on the steep cliff will protect its 250,000 residents from radiation and meteorites (cool!), while still giving them access to indirect sunlight. ABIBOO’s plan is to design Nüwa to be self-sustainable. At first, it will have to rely on supplies and capital investment from Earth, but the hope is that it will eventually be able to grow using local resources only. Those living on Mars will work and live in ‘Macro Buildings’ – excavations inside the rock which are linked together by a network of tunnels, trains, and buses – while ‘Green Domes’ will offer artificial park-like space. At the top of the cliff is the ‘Mesa’, where manufacturing, energy generation, and food production will take place – crops will provide 50 per cent of residents’ diet, with microalgae making up the rest. As for socialising, there will be pavilions at the foot of the cliff – called the ‘Valley’ – where you can go with your mates and look out at the landscape of Mars (thanks to the buildings’ “translucent skins”). This area will also contain hospitals, schools and universities, sports and cultural activities, shopping areas, and farming areas. Pigs, chickens, and fish will provide a minor contribution to residents’ diets, but will mostly offer “a high psychological value” – presumably as communal pets, of sorts. Also located in the Valley are train stations which will communicate with the space shuttle to get you the hell out of Mars. In bad news for commuters, the shuttle is only set to travel to Earth every 26 months, with a journey time of one to three months. A one-way ticket will cost approximately $300,000 (£218k) – but, for those settling on Mars, this price also includes a residential unit, access to common facilities, life support services and food, as well as a work contract which signs away 60 to 80 per cent of your work life to tasks assigned by the city. No four-day working week then? Construction of Nüwa is set to begin in 2054 – just 28 years after Elon Musk’s proposed landing date on Mars. See the planned layout for the city in the video below. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.TrendingIs veganism a privilege? Billie Eilish’s take on meat eaters not being animal lovers has divided the internet and sparked a conversation on meat, classism and racism – young vegans and non-vegans alike weigh inLife & CultureBeautyNude awakening: Meet the young people embracing naturismBeauty10 of the hottest Instagram accounts fusing art, sex and eroticaLife & CultureThere is nothing more romantic than friendship SamsungLife & CultureWhat went down at Dazed Club’s drop-in skate session with SamsungFashionAmericana is back – but who does it belong to?Art & PhotographyThis graffiti artist spreads poetry on trucks across BerlinFilm & TVHow film noir influenced Blade Runner’s beautiful darknessMaison Margiela FragrancesEventWhat went down at Maison Margiela’s ‘The Scentsorium Collection’ launchEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy