ABSTRACT NeoBoard is a modular furniture system designed for maximum adaptability in various living and working environments. It consists of easy-to-assemble, 3D-printable panels and a central connection interface called NeoPanel. The project aims to rethink furniture not as a fixed product but as a transformable infrastructure that can be expanded and reconfigured using plug-in modules, add-ons, and digital configurators. The modules are suitable for apartments, co-working spaces, workshops, emergency shelters—and potentially even for lunar environments. Due to its compact storage and lightweight design, NeoBoard is ideal for rocket transportation and on-site production. The system is highly adaptable, as every component can be replaced, reused, and combined in new ways, making it inherently sustainable through its flexibility.

1. Introduction

The world is changing rapidly. From the rise of micro-apartments in dense urban centers to the urgent need for fast-deployable infrastructure in disaster zones, and even the emerging ambition of lunar colonization — the demands placed on living and working environments are becoming increasingly diverse, unstable, and extreme.

At the same time, the design world faces a challenge: how to create systems that are not only adaptable to a wide range of scenarios, but also reusable, efficient, lightweight, and intuitively usable — regardless of the user’s background or location?

NeoBoard is a response to this challenge.

It is a modular, open-ended furniture and infrastructure system designed to adapt to both terrestrial and extraterrestrial environments. Built on a logic of interlocking panels and interchangeable components, NeoBoard can transform into anything: a workbench, a bed, a vertical garden, a command desk, or even an entire interior environment for Moon missions.

The system is guided by two central principles:

Minimalism in structure, allowing for maximum flexibility

Efficiency in production and transport, making it suitable for space travel and local fabrication

The research question behind NeoBoard is simple yet ambitious:

How can we design a modular furniture system that functions as a spatial operating system — able to evolve, be printed, repaired, and reconfigured in any context, from city apartments to lunar bases?

This paper outlines the development process of NeoBoard, including its conceptual foundation, material strategy, modular architecture, and potential real-world applications. It reflects on both historical design influences and emerging technologies, aiming to establish a new model of flexible living — not built to impress, but built to respond.

Screenshot 2025-05-02 230344.png
4a98a240-a242-4361-a6b7-b3c0731da248.png
242cf47c-1fa2-4623-b736-7440abeb22dd.png

2. THE PROJECT