Helicom Habitat: Hexagonal Modules That Learn From Arctic Ice FloesHelicom Habitat: Hexagonal Modules That Learn From Arctic Ice Floes

Helicom Habitat: Hexagonal Modules That Learn From Arctic Ice Floes

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What if the most hostile landscape on the planet could teach us how to build? Helicom HabitatNow takes its cues from the self-organizing patterns of polar ice floes, translating their geometry into a cluster of hexagonal modules that lock together, resist brutal winds, and capture every available watt of solar energy. The result is a settlement that doesn't just survive the Arctic; it performs like part of its ecosystem.

Designed by Wioletta Dębicka, Kamila Suszek, Robert Czajka, and Alicja Kowalewska, the project was recognized as a People's Choice Award finalist in the EHC - Arctic Competition. It proposes a net-zero energy research habitat for scholars, scientists, and transient inhabitants, addressing the Arctic's twinned problems of extreme climate and profound isolation through an interdisciplinary framework that weaves together climatology, material science, and urban ecology.

Low Profiles Against Polar Winds

Rendered illustration of low-slung structures with curved roofs and people walking with dogs across a snowy plaza
Rendered illustration of low-slung structures with curved roofs and people walking with dogs across a snowy plaza

The exterior rendering immediately communicates the settlement's strategy: stay low, stay curved, stay together. Structures with softly arched roofs hug the snow-covered ground, presenting minimal surface area to the polar vortex winds that scour the site. People walk with dogs across a sheltered plaza between buildings, a detail that quietly insists on the design's central claim: this is not just a survival pod but a place where daily life unfolds outdoors, even in the cold. The curved roof profiles are not merely aesthetic; they serve an aerodynamic function, deflecting wind loads over and around the inhabited volumes rather than catching them broadside.

Timber, Light, and the Social Interior

Interior rendering of a communal space with timber slat partitions, exposed ceiling beams, and people seated at tables
Interior rendering of a communal space with timber slat partitions, exposed ceiling beams, and people seated at tables

Step inside and the palette shifts to warm timber slat partitions and exposed ceiling beams, materials chosen to counter the psychological weight of months-long darkness. The communal space shown here functions as one of the habitat's knowledge-sharing hubs: a place where researchers sit at shared tables, exchange findings, and simply coexist. In an environment where isolation is as dangerous as frostbite, these socio-spatial decisions carry real weight. The slatted partitions allow visual permeability between zones, encouraging chance encounters while still offering acoustic separation. It is interior design driven by the understanding that in extreme environments, community cohesion is infrastructure.

Tessellation Under the Aurora

Aerial rendering of hexagonal modules arranged in a cluster formation beneath the northern lights at dusk
Aerial rendering of hexagonal modules arranged in a cluster formation beneath the northern lights at dusk

Seen from above at dusk, the hexagonal cluster reads as a single organism. The modules tessellate tightly, minimizing exposed exterior wall area and creating protected microclimates in the interstitial spaces between units. Geometric tessellation is not just a formal choice here; it is a thermodynamic one. Shared walls reduce heat loss. The compact cluster shortens the distances people must travel between functions. And the modular logic means the settlement can grow incrementally as research populations expand, with new hexagons clicking into place without disrupting the energy or circulation systems of the existing whole.

A Central Courtyard Organizes Everything

Floor plan drawing showing hexagonal units organized around a central courtyard with wall section detail callouts
Floor plan drawing showing hexagonal units organized around a central courtyard with wall section detail callouts

The floor plan reveals the settlement's organizational logic: hexagonal units radiate outward from a central courtyard, a communal void that anchors orientation and social life simultaneously. Wall section callouts on the drawing hint at the layered thermal envelope required to make habitation viable, though the designers wisely keep the focus on spatial relationships rather than getting lost in construction details alone. The courtyard acts as both a gathering space and a thermal buffer, concentrating body heat and blocking wind from penetrating deeper into the plan. Every module connects to this center, ensuring that no inhabitant is more than a few steps from shared public space.

Systems Thinking From Ice to Energy to Food

Diagram illustrating design concept evolution and hexagonal sustainability systems including energy, water, and food production
Diagram illustrating design concept evolution and hexagonal sustainability systems including energy, water, and food production

The concept evolution diagram lays bare the integrated sustainability systems that underpin the project. Photovoltaic arrays, vertical-axis wind turbines, and geothermal heat exchange form a renewable energy matrix designed to push the settlement toward net-zero performance. High-albedo surface treatments reflect solar radiation strategically, while passive solar principles orient glazing and mass to maximize thermal retention during the Arctic's brief daylight hours. Beyond energy, the diagram maps water cycling and food production loops, suggesting a closed-system approach where waste from one process feeds another. It is the kind of holistic systems thinking that separates speculative Arctic design from rigorous Arctic design.

Why This Project Matters

Helicom HabitatNow matters because it refuses to treat Arctic architecture as a problem of insulation alone. By grounding its formal language in biomimetic logic, its energy strategy in redundancy and renewables, and its social program in genuine community-building, the project offers a scalable model for habitation in climatically volatile territories. The hexagonal module is not a novelty; it is a decision with thermal, structural, and social consequences that the designers have thought through at every scale.

For a student team working in the realm of speculative competition design, the level of systemic integration here is noteworthy. Dębicka, Suszek, Czajka, and Kowalewska have produced a proposal that moves beyond imagery and into methodology, contributing meaningfully to the evolving conversation about how architecture might not just endure extreme environments but actively belong to them.



View the Full Project

About the Designers

Designers: Wioletta Dębicka, Kamila Suszek, Robert Czajka, Alicja Kowalewska

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Project credits: HabitatNow by Wioletta Dębicka, Kamila Suszek, Robert Czajka, Alicja Kowalewska EHC - Arctic (uni.xyz).

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