By Zach Winn
As spaceflight becomes more affordable and accessible, the story of human life in space is just beginning. Aurelia Institute wants to make sure that future benefits all of humanity — whether in space or here on Earth.
Founded by Ariel Ekblaw SM ’17, PhD ’20; Danielle DeLatte ’11; and former MIT research scientist Sana Sharma, the nonprofit institute serves as a research lab for space technology and architecture, a center for education and outreach, and a policy hub dedicated to inspiring more people to work in the space industry.
“The Media Lab was like magic in the years I was there,” Ekblaw says. “It had this sense of what we used to call ‘anti-disciplinary permission-lessness.’ You could get funding to explore really different and provocative ideas. Our mission was to democratize access to space.”
In 2016, while taking a class taught by Neri Oxman, then a professor in the Media Lab, Ekblaw got the idea for the TESSERAE Project, in which tiles autonomously self-assemble into spherical space structures.