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Updated Jun 8, 2026 · 20:06
Technology News Updated Jun 8, 2026

Prada Designs Advanced Cooling Garments for NASA’s Moon Missions

Italian fashion house Prada and US startup Axiom Space have unveiled a high-performance inner layer for NASA's next-generation lunar spacesuits. The Liquid Cooling and Ventilation Garment (LCVG) features a fully redundant cooling circuit, ensuring astronaut safety during up to eight-hour spacewalks on the Moon. The suit circulates cold water through tubes across major muscle groups to absorb metabolic heat and delivers fresh oxygen to wash away exhaled carbon dioxide. The collaboration aims to support NASA's Artemis III mission, targeted for 2026, marking the first human return to the lunar surface in over 50 years.

NASA astronauts on moon missions to wear Prada-designed water-cooled garments under spacesuits

New York, June 8

Italian luxury fashion house Prada's latest design innovation will be worn beneath NASA's next-generation lunar spacesuit on future Moon missions!

Both Prada. and Houston-based US startup Axiom Space have officially unveiled the high-performance inner layer for the spacesuits to be worn by NASA astronauts on the Moon, marking a unique collaboration between aerospace engineering and high-end fashion.

NASA's Artemis III mission, currently targeted for 2026, aims to land on the Moon's South Pole. This marks the first human return to the lunar surface in over 50 years.

The new "Liquid Cooling and Ventilation Garment" (LCVG) is a specialised inner suit designed for the Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit (AxEMU), the next-generation spacesuit that will be used for NASA's Artemis III and IV missions.

The LCVG serves as the critical layer worn directly against the astronaut's body. Its primary function is thermal regulation, which is vital as astronauts perform physically demanding spacewalks of up to eight hours. As crew members perform spacewalks, their bodies generate significant metabolic heat

The garment features an intricate network of tubes that circulate cold water across major muscle groups to absorb and carry away metabolic heat as per a statement by Axiom Space The key innovation in the Prada-designed inner suit is the inclusion of a fully redundant cooling circuit, a first for such garments.

This backup system ensures that if the primary cooling loop fails, a secondary system will activate to protect the astronaut from overheating in the harsh lunar environment.

Beyond cooling, the suit also manages ventilation.

A separate loop of tubes delivers fresh oxygen across the astronaut's face to wash away exhaled carbon dioxide, which is then routed back through a life-support system for scrubbing and recirculation.

"The future of space exploration will not be built by any one entity alone, and our partnership with Prada is proof of that. By bringing together the best in both aerospace engineering as well as luxury craftsmanship and advanced product development, we have developed a garment that neither company could have created independently, and that is exactly the kind of cross-industry thinking that will define the next era of human spaceflight," Jonathan Cirtain, CEO and President, Axiom Space, said.

Lorenzo Bertelli, Prada Group Chief Marketing Officer and Head of Sustainability, expressed pride in the achievement.

"The LCVG collaboration draws on Prada's expertise in design, patternmaking, and advanced materials, resulting in a next-generation garment developed through advanced 3D modelling techniques that maintain cooling and ventilation while enhancing comfort during up to eight-hour spacewalks," Prada said in a statement.

"Every minute astronauts spend outside their vehicle, the LCVG is working to keep them safe," said Russell Ralston, Axiom Space Senior Vice President of Spacecraft Development.

"It manages their thermal environment, supports their breathing, and does it all while they're pushing their bodies to the limit. The work we have done with Prada has taken that capability to a level we could not have achieved alone."

The unveiling of the inner layer follows the 2024 debut of the AxEMU's outer layer at the International Astronautical Congress in Milan.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Nidhi U

A bit skeptical about this... Prada is known for luxury, not reliability in extreme conditions. Don't get me wrong, it's cool, but I hope safety isn't compromised for fashion. The backup cooling circuit sounds promising though. 🤔

Ramesh W

What a time to be alive! From chappals to spacesuits, human ingenuity knows no bounds. The fact that Prada used 3D modelling for something that will be worn on the Moon—hats off! And Artemis III landing on the South Pole in 2026? Can't wait for that moment! 🚀

Samantha B

This is genuinely impressive. The thermal regulation for 8-hour spacewalks is no joke, and having a redundant cooling circuit is a smart safety measure. But paying Prada prices for a suit that's hidden under the outer layer? Seems like a branding move more than a technical necessity.

Rohit L

Yaar, this is next level! First they land on the Moon, now they're doing it in style with Prada. But seriously, the redundant cooling system is a game-changer—what if the primary fails? The backup likely saves lives. Hope ISRO takes notes for Gaganyaan! 🇮🇳💪

Kavitha C

Honestly, I'm more excited about the ventilation aspect—removing CO2 and recirculating oxygen is critical for long spacewalks. The Prada part is just hype; the real heroes are the engineers at Axiom Space. Still, it's a neat collaboration that shows fashion and function can coexist. 👍

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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