Meet the Founder

Megan Eskey

We're not here to follow trends—we're here to build something timeless. With a blend of creativity, strategy, and heart, we help planetary cartography come to life.

We have defined a syntax for planetary addresses and a lexicon for the first roads in space. We are constructing a language for space roadbotics, in our collective quest to become a multiplanetary species.

The space roadbotics end game won’t be played in boardrooms, but rather in space agencies around the world. The next space race may literally be that: a race along the surface of the Moon.

Megan Eskey Megan Eskey

The Space Race

By the time I joined NASA in 1983, the US had launched the shuttle program, with astronauts orbiting Earth and later visiting the International Space Station. The space race was over, and global cooperation was the new trend. With the end of Apollo came the end of the frenzied excitement that glued the world to television screens in every country. I joined NASA two weeks before Sally Ride’s historic flight, STS-7, which ushered in a new climate of gender equality to the agency.

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Megan Eskey Megan Eskey

Highway to the Moon

Also linked to the evolution of space and the evolution of human consciousness are the planetary roads, combining American ingenuity with a development model that more closely resembles the Cold War space race than the ISS. Who will build the fastest roadbots? Today, it appears that ESA and GMV have taken the lead. Redundancy is at the heart of the planetary roads. If the onboard navigation system fails on the manned rovers, the astronauts will have an alternate way to return to the nearest base.

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