STOCKHOLM (AP) – A Swedish artist is about to have the dream of a lifetime fulfilled: A little red model house he created will be launched into space this week and, if all goes according to plan, put on the surface of the moon.
The Moonhouse, the size of a big hand, will hitch a ride to the moon on a lunar lander operated by the Japanese company ispace. It’s set for takeoff on SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral.
Artist Mikael Genberg said he has been wanting to put his typically Swedish-looking miniature house on the moon for 25 years.
It was “a crazy, maybe idiotic, but at the same time, in my mind, really poetic thought to put a red house with white corners on the surface of the moon”, Genberg said in a video posted on Facebook. “And now it’s going to happen.”
“What’s the purpose? It’s art,” he added.
Genberg, who is currently in Florida to watch the launch in person, said he was very excited to finally see his house get shot into space.
“It’s small on this planet, but it will be big on the moon – there’s nothing like that in space,” he told The Associated Press in a phone interview.
The house is made out of aluminium and daubed with a special, space-certified paint. It’s 12 centimetres (cm) long, 8cm wide and 10cm tall.
Genberg’s signature art project has already traveled the world in recent years. The Moonhouse has been installed up in trees, underwater, was taken to the Great Wall of China, and even to the International Space Station 400 kilometres above Earth as a companion to Sweden’s first astronaut, Christer Fuglesang, according to the project’s website.
While it was Genberg’s idea to put the house on the moon with the help of lunar rover Tenacious, about 70 people donated some SEK7 million to SEK10 million (USD620,000-USD888,000) for the project, which also includes the flight, he said.
“The vision of the artwork merges with our own; to expand our planet and future, and to extend the sphere of human life into space,” CEO of ispace Europe Julien-Alexandre Lamamy said in a statement.
