Search

Fairchild Launches Nationwide ‘Maker Contest’ to Reinvent Food Production Systems for Long Distance Space Travel

Fairchild Launches Nationwide ‘Maker Contest’ to Reinvent Food Production Systems for Long Distance Space Travel

Maker Contest Announced at Nation of Makers Conference June 15-16

PR Newswire

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. and MIAMI, June 17, 2019 /PRNewswire/ — At the Nation of Makers annual conference June 15-16, 2019 in Chattanooga, the national conference that brings together leaders from maker organizations that represent the U.S. maker movement, Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden launched its Growing Beyond Earth Maker Contest, a three-year multidisciplinary endeavor to leverage the ingenuity of minds across the nation to reinvent the systems used to grow edible plants on the International Space Station (ISS) and beyond.

Growing Beyond Earth Maker Contest

“We are calling on makers across America to collaborate with us and submit their designs for gardening systems to be used aboard spacecraft,” said Dr. Carl Lewis, Director of Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden. “The Maker Contest is a unique opportunity for everyone to get involved on the ground floor and help meet the challenges of growing food in long distance space travel.”

The contest is open to professional, college and high school teams. Entries to the contest will be assessed and judged by NASA engineers and botanists, and winning proposals will be considered for implementation on future NASA missions.

As NASA looks toward a long-term human presence beyond Earth orbit, they face specific science, technology, engineering, and mathematics challenges related to food production in space. Through the Maker Contest, Fairchild’s goal is to harness the creativity and talent throughout a national network of makerspaces, and its local community, to address those challenges, which include (1) how to efficiently use three-dimensional plant growing space aboard spacecraft, (2) how to maintain plants without human intervention, and (3) how to design a fully automated robotic planting and harvesting system.

Fairchild’s Growing Beyond Earth Innovation Studio in Miami is the world’s first makerspace in a botanic garden. Grants totaling approximately $1 million from NASA ($750,000) and the Institute of Museum and Library Services ($250,000) support the new, first-of-its-kind community workspace dedicated to the technology of growing food. It will serve students in elementary, middle and high schools, local community members of all ages, and makers throughout the U.S.

“Together with maker leaders, we are looking to inspire a new group of innovators to effectively address the challenges of food technology production in space,” said Amy Padolf, Fairchild’s Director of Education. Padolf has been invited to speak on a panel on Community and Government Partnerships on June 24, 2019 at the 4th annual Capitol Hill Maker Faire in Washington, DC in celebration of the American Maker movement as a part of the National Week of Making.

In the first phase, Fairchild hopes to attract as many as 100 teams to participate. In the second phase, judges will award $500 to 15 teams to support prototyping and testing of their design. In the final phase, three top winners will be chosen in each category – professional, college and high school. The winners will receive a stipend to attend the 2020 Nation of Makers annual conference.

To apply for the Maker Contest, visit Instructables. Designs must be submitted by February 3, 2020, and the winning designs will be announced February 14, 2020. Judges for this contest will include NASA engineers and botanists, and winning proposals will be considered for implementation on future NASA missions.

The Growing Beyond Earth Innovation Studio is being developed in collaboration with Moonlighter Miami, a makerspace with broad local outreach programs. The Nation of Makers is a nonprofit organization that fosters collaboration among makerspaces nationwide.

About Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden

Established in 1938 and comprising 83 acres in Miami, Florida, Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to exploring, explaining and conserving the world of tropical plants. The world-renowned plant collections feature unusual plants from throughout the tropical world. Fairchild has the largest botanical education program of any metropolitan area, reaching more than 200,000 schoolchildren each year. Special events include Chocolate, Mango, and Orchid Festivals in addition to an annual art exhibition, concerts, plant sales and more. For more information, visit Fairchild and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest. 

Cision View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/fairchild-launches-nationwide-maker-contest-to-reinvent-food-production-systems-for-long-distance-space-travel-300869238.html

SOURCE Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden



Congress Updates

Senators Push Navy Against Single Destroyer Request In FY ’27

The chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) and the two senators from Maine last week pushed back on Navy officials for only requesting one Arleigh Burke-class destroyer (DDG-51) […]


Navy Looks To Eventually Assemble Battleship At HII Newport News; Faces More Dem Opposition

The Navy told lawmakers this week it found a dry dock at HII’s [HII] Newport News Shipbuilding shipyard it thinks can use for final assembly of the new Trump-class battleship […]


Navy Leaders Downplay Looking At Foreign Navy Shipbuilding Amid Lawmaker Objections

The Navy’s top leaders this week seemed to downplay and back down on the service potentially using foreign shipyards to build U.S. Navy ships or buying foreign designed warships overseas […]


Senate Defense Appropriators See ‘Risk’ With Army’s Reconciliation Plan To Fund Munitions Increase

The Senate’s top defense appropriators cited concern this week with the Army’s request to fund the majority of its large increase to munitions procurement in fiscal year 2027 through the […]