Constance Adams

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Adams presenting at TEDxHouston in June 2011

Constance Adams is an architect who now works in the space program.

Personal life

Adams studied sociology at Harvard University, then went on to Yale University, where she completed a master's degree in architecture. After a two-year apprenticeship with Kenzo Tange Associates in Tokyo, followed by four years working in Berlin on commercial and master planning projects. In the late 90s she was employed by Lockheed Martin Space Operations, to support the NASA’s Mars exploration research efforts at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, where she now lives with her family.[1] .

Career

Among other projects, Adams was involved in developing the Lockheed-Martin design of an inflatable module for the International Space Station.[2] The module, known as TransHab ("transit habitat"), was designed to provide living quarters for astronauts aboard the space station, including a common room, gymnasium, shower, etc. Budget considerations and delays, as well as politics, meant that the module failed to develop beyond the design stage.[3]

In 2005 Adams was named an Emerging Explorer by National Geographic.[4]

Quotations

"A spaceship is a delicately balanced environment. Every element that doesn't contribute to the overall functioning of the system is by definition working against it. The same is true of our planet – our mothership – though sadly, most architecture today is slowly fatal to nature's systems." (Constance Adams)
"If you can't visualize it, don't build it." (Constance Adams)

References

  1. ^ http://www.newschool.edu/pressroom/pressreleases/2007/20070328_parsons_taste.html
  2. ^ Adams, Constance, Kriss J. Kennedy. “ISS TransHab: A Space Inflatable Habitation Module” Proceedings of Space 2000: The Seventh International Conference and Exposition on Engineering, Construction, Operations and Business in Space (2000); American Society of Civil Engineers, Reston VA
  3. ^ 106th Congress (24 January 2000). "National Aeronautics and Space Administration Authorization Act of 2000". Library of Congress. Retrieved 26 May 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ nationalgeographic retrieved 24th April 2010

External links

1. "Water for Two Worlds: Designing Terrestrial Applications for Exploration-class Sanitation Systems ", 2004, NASA Technical Reports Server

2. "Reallusory Viewing: A Study of the Application of Virtual Windows in Hermetic Environments", 1999, NASA Technical Reports Server

3. "Space Architecture: Building The Future", 1999, NASA Technical Reports Server

4. "The Role of Habitability Studies in Space Facility and Vehicle Design", 1999, NASA Technical Reports Server

5. "Habitability as a Tier One Criterion in Exploration Mission and Vehicle Design",1999, NASA Technical Reports Server

6. "Item Description: ISS TransHab Restraint Sample and Photo Documentation", 2000, NASA Technical Reports Server

7. "Water for Two Worlds: Designing Terrestrial Applications for Exploration-class Sanitation Systems", 2004, NASA Technical Reports Server

8. "An Interview with Constance Adams" — from HobbySpace (retrieved 9 February 2006)

9. Quotation from BrainyQuote http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/c/constance_adams.html

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