The Cathedral and the Starship: Learning from the Middle Ages for Future Long-Duration Projects
Andreas M. Hein

TL;DR
This paper examines medieval cathedral construction to derive insights for managing long-duration space projects, emphasizing modularity, flexible planning, and stable funding to address uncertainties and interruptions.
Contribution
It challenges the myth of continuous cathedral building, highlighting modular architecture and funding strategies as key lessons for future long-term space endeavors.
Findings
Cathedral building often occurred in campaigns with interruptions.
Funding availability dictated construction activity periods.
Modular and flexible project architectures are essential for long-term success.
Abstract
A popular analogue used in the space domain is that of historical building projects, notably cathedrals that took decades and in some cases centuries to complete. Cathedrals are often taken as archetypes for long-term projects. In this article, I will explore the cathedral from the point of view of project management and systems architecting and draw implications for long-term projects in the space domain, notably developing a starship. I will show that the popular image of a cathedral as a continuous long-term project is in contradiction to the current state of research. More specifically, I will show that for the following propositions: The cathedrals were built based on an initial detailed master plan; Building was a continuous process that adhered to the master plan; Investments were continuously provided for the building process. Although initial plans might have existed, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace exploration and regulation
