I think it is possible to build strong, airtight domes on the moon, with only moon dust and sunlight as the raw materials, fairly cheaply before the next humans arrive.
This method turns moon dust into moon rock, in any desired size and shape and requires no water or frame, just some equipment and a lot of sunlight. The only parts not necessarily built with local materials are the airlock and whatever interior furnishings you might want once humans arrive.
It's a crude form of selective laser sintering. A robot sweeps a solar-powered laser beam back and forth across a layer of moon dust within the footprint of your future wall, fusing it into a thin layer of moon rock. Then it spreads a thin layer of moon dust over that and fuses it, and so on. It may take a year for a few robots to build a thick-walled, house-sized igloo, but what's the hurry if humans won't be arriving any time soon?
Selective laser sintering is used for fast prototyping of metal parts, normally in a small chamber. But on the moon, it can be done outdoors, since wind isn't an issue. The only building material required is moon dust, which is transformed into monolithic rock of any desired shape, in this case a hollow dome wrapped around and dwarfing an imported airlock.
And getting the robots, their solar panels, spare parts, and other equipment to the moon requires less fuel than sending humans, because they're in no hurry to get there and require no life support or fuel for a trip home.
This method turns moon dust into moon rock, in any desired size and shape and requires no water or frame, just some equipment and a lot of sunlight. The only parts not necessarily built with local materials are the airlock and whatever interior furnishings you might want once humans arrive.
It's a crude form of selective laser sintering. A robot sweeps a solar-powered laser beam back and forth across a layer of moon dust within the footprint of your future wall, fusing it into a thin layer of moon rock. Then it spreads a thin layer of moon dust over that and fuses it, and so on. It may take a year for a few robots to build a thick-walled, house-sized igloo, but what's the hurry if humans won't be arriving any time soon?
Selective laser sintering is used for fast prototyping of metal parts, normally in a small chamber. But on the moon, it can be done outdoors, since wind isn't an issue. The only building material required is moon dust, which is transformed into monolithic rock of any desired shape, in this case a hollow dome wrapped around and dwarfing an imported airlock.
And getting the robots, their solar panels, spare parts, and other equipment to the moon requires less fuel than sending humans, because they're in no hurry to get there and require no life support or fuel for a trip home.