Space and Aviation

Space and Aviation

Problem

Space missions are evolving into long-duration and habitation-based systems, where materials must operate within closed ecological loops. Current textile systems remain linear, dependent on resupply, generating waste, and lacking integration with life-support and recovery systems.

Regulatory Pressure

Emerging space system requirements increasingly reflect terrestrial regulatory logic, particularly around lifecycle traceability, durability, and system-level accountability, as defined in frameworks such as the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation and Digital Product Passports (European Parliament & Council, 2024a, Arts. 1–3, 11).

System Shift

From consumable materials to regenerative habitat infrastructure, where textiles are continuously recovered, tracked, and reintegrated within life-support ecosystems.

Our Solution

Transforming Textiles develops Re:Weave-enabled textile systems designed for closed-loop operation, integrating recoverability, traceability, and in-situ regeneration across spacecraft interiors, crew systems, and space habitats, aligning material performance with system-level circularity requirements.

Refrences

European Parliament & Council. (2024a). Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 establishing a framework for the setting of ecodesign requirements for sustainable products (ESPR).  | European Parliament & Council. (2022). Directive (EU) 2022/2464 on corporate sustainability reporting (CSRD). | Geissdoerfer, M., Savaget, P., Bocken, N. M. P., & Hultink, E. J. (2017). The circular economy – A new sustainability paradigm? Journal of Cleaner Production, 143, 757–768.

Kirchherr, J., Reike, D., & Hekkert, M. (2017). Conceptualizing the circular economy: An analysis of 114 definitions. Resources, Conservation and Recycling, 127, 221–232.