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Asked by fund532tout4 to Viviene DC, scottacton, Natasha P, maiajones, konstantina_k, alistairglasse, Alessio S on 5 Dec 2025.
Asked by fund532tout4 to Viviene DC, scottacton, Natasha P, maiajones, konstantina_k, alistairglasse, Alessio S on 5 Dec 2025.
Comments
fund532tout4 commented on :
Hi Alessio Spampinato,
Thankyou for getting back to me. I have been following this for the past few years now but I’m still trying to figure how how I make myself fit into it. I’m currently an a-level student but next year I plan to go to university. Right now I aim to attend Bath University for their Structural and Architectural Engineering MEng course but I worry that structural engineering, while still STEM, isn’t of interest to space because as you stated (Artemis aside) a lot of space structures are built for some type of orbit. They likely wont make structural engineers astronauts either (even though the requirement is just a STEM masters with 3 yrs of experience).
Do you think this is still a good course for me to take or would you recommend I study something else. If so, what would you recommend?
Alessio S commented on :
Hi! Not a problem.
I have had a look at the MEng course you mention. It looks like it is more focussed on civil structures but some of the skills you could learn might be applicable to space habitats in the future. However, I would say, that is a field which is not clearly defined, so it might take a while for some institutions/universities to develop a course which is 100% on space-related habitable structures (at least, this is how it look like in the UK right now).
I would say, a Mechanical Engineering MEng would teach you a lot of the things you might one day apply in the space sector. Post-university, you might see “Structural Engineer” job ads for space-related jobs that require all the skills gained from a mechanical engineering course, like mechanical design and finite element analysis.
Of course, there are aerospace-specific courses you could take. One example is the Aeronautics with Spacecraft Engineering MEng at the Imperial College London. Other options would be: do a more generic engineering BSc (or mechanical engineering) and then specialise with a MSc in something like “astronautics and space engineering” or “space systems engineering”. Also, I can see there are online courses on space habitats one could take (for a few months), possibly to complement an university programme.
If you like the Structural and Architectural Engineering MEng course, and it is convenient to you, you could still specialise in something more space-focussed after that. You would have gained expertise in designing civil structures as a baseline, which you could then combine with knowledge/skills gained from a space related course.
I wish I could give you a more definite answer on what is the best path. I believe there are different routes to get to what you want to do.
Hope this helps a little bit!
All the best,
Alessio