Chapter 47: The Great Construction Project
Chapter 47: The Great Construction Project
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- The First Superhuman: Rebuilding Civilization from the Moon
- Chapter 47: The Great Construction Project
Chapter 47: The Great Construction Project
Following the government’s recruitment drive, a massive wave of construction projects finally commenced.
Jason had no intention of repeating the mistakes of command economies that focused solely on heavy industry while neglecting consumer goods. His first act as Administrator was to improve the living environment for his people.
He launched the “Great Construction Project,” rallying the ship around a simple slogan: “A Home for Every Family, A Life for Every Citizen!”
The factories hummed to life, churning out steel and cement around the clock. The workers poured their sweat into the project with unprecedented enthusiasm.
And why wouldn’t they? They were building their own future homes. People were fed up with living in modular tin cans. They yearned for proper apartments, for privacy, for dignity.
The steel-frame structures went up quickly, with industrial zones and laboratories completed in under a month. The residential zones, requiring reinforced concrete and more complex life-support integration, would take longer, perhaps six months to a year.
But no one minded the wait. Six months was a blink of an eye compared to the eternity of space. It gave them just enough time to save up their wages for a down payment.
A month passed quickly. Payday arrived, and for the first time, digital Credits were deposited into everyone’s accounts.
People flooded the commercial district, excitedly using their wages to buy discretionary goods: fresh meat, vegetables, and small amounts of alcohol.
In reality, compared to the previous rationing system, the material standard of living hadn’t drastically improved yet. But the psychological impact was profound. Happiness surged because the items they consumed were chosen, not assigned. The ability to choose gave them back a sense of freedom.
That same day marked another major milestone. Two prestigious research institutes were officially inaugurated.
The first was the “Wolfpack Design Bureau.” It was essentially a massive multidisciplinary laboratory, directed by Professor Hao Yu, the “Father of the Helium-3 Bomb.”
Engineers and scientists from the former Eastern Countries flocked to join, eager to work under the legendary physicist.
The second was the “Tesla Institute,” headed by Dr. Felix, the former Chief Physicist of the Lunar Base.
Scientists were free to apply to any institute they wished. If they had the credentials, they could even apply to establish their own independent labs.
However, Wolfpack and Tesla were the titans, receiving the lion’s share of resources.
The New Human Government allocated resources based on three key metrics: Energy Index, Resource Index, and Industrial Capacity Index. As long as an institute stayed within its allocated budget, they had total autonomy over their research direction (excluding unauthorized weapons development).
This was an unprecedented level of freedom. The scientists were ecstatic. Conducting experiments without having to write grant proposals or beg for corporate funding? It was a dream come true.
In the Old World, scientists spent half their time chasing money. Good ideas died on the vine for lack of funding. Now, money was irrelevant. Only results mattered.
They finally saw the benefit of a planned economy applied to science. But with freedom came pressure. If they burned through their resource allocation without producing results, it would be a public disgrace.
These people cherished their reputations. To reach the Lunar Base in the first place, they had to be the best in their fields. Failing once was acceptable; constant failure was humiliating.
In the Wolfpack Design Bureau, Professor Hao Yu was practically vibrating with joy. He waved his arms excitedly as he toured the new facility. No more budget committees! No more politicians asking about quarterly profits!
He felt like a bird released from a cage. He grabbed a tablet and scribbled down a new project title: *”The Ten-Billion-Ton Yield Nuclear Device…”*
He paused, thought for a moment, and crossed it out. Focus, Hao Yu. Focus. He still had a shred of rationality left; now wasn’t the time for planetary crackers.
He silently vowed to dedicate his life to Jason’s vision. To work without financial constraints was the ultimate happiness for a scientist.
Dr. Felix shared the sentiment, though he kept his excitement internalized.
In the public eye, the Wolfpack Design Bureau currently held a slight edge in prestige over the Tesla Institute.
Professor Hao Yu’s Helium-3 bomb had literally saved humanity, propelling the Noah into the void. That kind of tangible success was hard to beat.
But Dr. Felix was no slouch. As the former Chief Physicist, his reputation was stellar, and his institute attracted the cream of the crop from European and American scientific circles.
The two institutes settled into a dynamic of cooperative rivalry that captured the public’s imagination.
> Wolfpack Design Bureau (Physics Lab)
> Rating: S-Class
> Performance Score: 6685
> Tesla Institute (Physics Lab)
> Rating: S-Minus Class
> Performance Score: 6233
The scores represented a comprehensive performance metric. A higher score meant a larger resource allocation for the next fiscal year. The initial scores were based on contributions to the Noah Project.
If an institute wasted resources without results, their score would drop, and they would lose funding to their rivals. For these competitive intellects, falling behind was intolerable.
The rivalry became a favorite topic of dinner conversation. Citizens placed informal bets on which institute would produce the next breakthrough. Some were Team Wolfpack; others were Team Tesla.
The entire ship seemed to be entering a golden age of productivity.
But in the Administrator’s office, Jason was nursing a headache.
A report lay on his desk, and the man standing in front of him was shouting.
“I told you weeks ago! We needed to prioritize the ecosystem stability! Now look at the data! If the thermal regulation fails, you’ll roast everyone alive!”
“We’re lucky we caught it early! Otherwise, we’d be cooked!”
The man yelling was Dr. Roman, the chief biologist. He was genuinely panicked.
The temperature inside the spaceship was rising.
Since the start of the Great Construction Project, the ambient temperature had climbed by a full 2.2 degrees Celsius. The ship’s passive cooling systems were being overwhelmed.
Heavy industry, construction, thousands of machines running 24/7, electrical energy, kinetic energy, chemical energy, it all eventually degraded into heat.
Currently, the temperature was sitting at 26.3°C (79°F). It was warm, but bearable. But if the trend continued, it would soon hit 30°C, then 40°C. The Noah would turn into a pressure cooker.
People often assume space is cold. While the vacuum is technically near absolute zero, it is also a perfect insulator, like a thermos flask.
Heat transfer requires a medium. In a vacuum, there is no conduction or convection. Heat can only be shed through radiation, which is an agonizingly slow process.
To manage this, the original designers had installed massive thermal radiators on the exterior hull. But these radiators had limits. The internal heat generation was outpacing the radiation capacity.
Imagine a sealed room with one small window. Now turn on every oven, computer, and engine inside that room. It’s going to get hot fast.
“Doctor, I know. I know.” Jason nodded with a bitter smile. He understood the physics. “I will assign a team to address the thermal regulation issue immediately…”
The problem was critical, but he couldn’t stop the construction. The people needed homes.
“Dr. Roman, I want a large-scale ecosystem too. I want forests and grasslands. But we don’t have the biomass, the water, or the atmosphere to support it yet!”
“Once we reach Mars and replenish our stocks, I promise I will approve every single one of your terraforming proposals!”
Dr. Roman huffed, but he seemed mollified. “Fine. But solve the heat issue now. Or there won’t be anyone left to see Mars.”
“Understood,” Jason replied.
As Roman left, Jason sank back into his chair.
The Noah’s current ecosystem was too small and fragile. It lacked the buffer capacity of a planetary biosphere. A simple spike in industrial activity caused a temperature crisis.
The ultimate solution was to establish a massive, self-regulating internal biosphere. Humans currently occupied less than one ten-thousandth of the ship’s volume. There was plenty of space.
But they lacked the raw materials. Even with a billion tons of ore and a hundred million tons of ice, they were short on organics, soil, and nitrogen for the atmosphere.
Those problems could only be solved at Mars. The Red Planet had water, minerals, and an atmosphere they could harvest.
Until then, they just had to hold on.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 194: Prevention
- Chapter 193: Investigation
- Chapter 192: A Secret Report
- Chapter 191: The Memory Weapon
- Chapter 190: Treatment
- Chapter 189: Getting to Work
- Chapter 188: The Great Scientific Religion
- Chapter 187: The Path To Truth
- Chapter 186: Ambition
- Chapter 185: The Super Hadron Collider
- Chapter 184: A Metal Breakdown
- Chapter 183: The Arrest
- Chapter 182: A Day in the Life of an Alien
- Chapter 181: The Artificial Earth
- Chapter 180: A Extraterrestrial Parasite
- Chapter 179: The Loser Club
- Chapter 178: The Mysterious Superconductor
- Chapter 177: The Superalloy Series
- Chapter 176: The Great Leap in Science and Technology
- Chapter 175: Approximate Location
- Chapter 174: Comic Sociology
- Chapter 173: Honor System
- Chapter 172: Progress
- Chapter 171: Utopia
- Chapter 170: Democracy
- Chapter 169: Turning Waste into Treasure
- Chapter 168: Time Dilation
- Chapter 167: Magma Layer
- Chapter 166: A New Journey
- Chapter 165: Ultimate Destruction
- Chapter 164: The Last Supper
- Chapter 163: Taunts and Insults
- Chapter 162: A Feast For Scientists
- Chapter 161: A Small Star
- Chapter 160: Massive Attack
- Chapter 159: The First Battle in Deep Space
- Chapter 158: Nuclear Attack
- Chapter 157: Anti-Entropy Field Aggregation Particles
- Chapter 156: The Viridian Bribery
- Chapter 155: Emergency Manufacturing
- Chapter 154: A Two Prolonged Approach
- Chapter 153: Another Hope
- Chapter 152: Nuclear Interception
- Chapter 151: The Neutron Star Fragment
- Chapter 150: Culture
- Chapter 149: Enemy of the Viridian’s
- Chapter 148: Planetary Spaceship
- Chapter 147: Star Fragment Energy
- Chapter 146: Holding a Treasure?
- Chapter 145: A Mysterious Gravitational Source
- Chapter 144: In Blink of an Eye
- Chapter 143: Quantum Computer
- Chapter 142: A State of Equilibrium
- Chapter 141: The Federation
- Chapter 140: A Psychological Advantage
- Chapter 139: Fawning
- Chapter 138: The End of a Civilization
- Chapter 137: Alien, Monkey, Tree-Folk
- Chapter 136: An Unforeseen Crisis
- Chapter 135: Too Frightening!
- Chapter 134: Mutual Distrust
- Chapter 133: Continuing the Disguise
- Chapter 132: Decryption
- Chapter 131: The Victory of the Pretender
- Chapter 130: The Fall Of An Interstellar Empire
- Chapter 129: The Response
- Chapter 128: The Dark Forest
- Chapter 127: The Ion Cannon
- Chapter 126: Open Fire!!
- Chapter 125: Smoke and Mirrors
- Chapter 124: Space Fortress
- Chapter 123: The Disguise Plan
- Chapter 122: Signals from Outer Space
- Chapter 121: The Beginning of a Great Era
- Chapter 120: Nuclear Fusion
- Chapter 119: Technological Boom (2)
- Chapter 118: Technological Boom(1)
- Chapter 117: Relocation
- Chapter 116: Mom on the Destruction of Earth
- Chapter 115: Various Theories
- Chapter 114: Post-Recovery Meeting
- Chapter 113: Going Home
- Chapter 112: Crisis and... Gains?
- Chapter 111: Sudden Battle
- Chapter 110: Rescue Plan
- Chapter 109: Psychological Warfare
- Chapter 108: Metal Door
- Chapter 107: Missing
- Chapter 106: Hypnosis
- Chapter 105: Onwards
- Chapter 104: Final Preparations
- Chapter 103: Modified Gauss Rifle
- Chapter 102: Target-Inner Ring
- Chapter 101: Advice
- Chapter 100: Investigation
- Chapter 99: Exploration Operation
- Chapter 98: Surveillance
- Chapter 97: Choice
- Chapter 96: A Sudden Crisis!!
- Chapter 95: Civilization Turning Point
- Chapter 94: A Happy and Busy Life
- Chapter 93: Laser Ignition Scheme
- Chapter 92: Weapon Research
- Chapter 91: The Longevity Hypothesis
- Chapter 90: The Blast Furnace
- Chapter 89: The Longevity Virus
- Chapter 88: Machine Prototypes
- Chapter 87: Willpower
- Chapter 86: No Way Out
- Chapter 85: Lily’s Secret
- Chapter 84: Superhuman Research
- Chapter 83: A New Atmosphere
- Chapter 82: A New Year Begins
- Chapter 81: Weapon Research
- Chapter 80: Destructive Technology
- Chapter 79: Dark Universe
- Chapter 78: A Powerful Civilization?
- Chapter 77: The Great Filter
- Chapter 76: The Universal Law of Life
- Chapter 75: The Mystery of the Universe
- Chapter 74: A New Environment
- Chapter 73: Sense of Crisis
- Chapter 72: The Horn of the Industry
- Chapter 71: The Grand Design
- Chapter 70: Ironclad Order
- Chapter 69: The Grand Blueprint
- Chapter 68: The Mega Deposit
- Chapter 67: Awakening
- Chapter 66: Dawn of Victory
- Chapter 65: Psychic Ability
- Chapter 64: Serum Therapy
- Chapter 63: Johnny’s Death
- Chapter 62: Superhuman Enter The Battle
- Chapter 61: One after Another
- Chapter 60: Silent Battle
- Chapter 59: The Arrival Of The Noah
- Chapter 58: Rescue Plan
- Chapter 57: Unknown Plague
- Chapter 56: The Uranium Strike
- Chapter 55: Landing
- Chapter 54: Selecting The Team
- Chapter 53: Arrival on Mars
- Chapter 52: Vacuum Zero Point Energy
- Chapter 51: The Energy Paradox
- Chapter 50: Mars
- Chapter 49: Ice Cooling
- Chapter 48: Wolfpack Vs Tesla
- Chapter 47: The Great Construction Project
- Chapter 46: The New Economy
- Chapter 45: The Beginning Of Super Civilization
- Chapter 44: The Population Crisis
- Chapter 43: Malice Of The Cosmos
- Chapter 42: Goodbye, Mother
- Chapter 41: Towards Mars
- Chapter 40: Departure To Mars
- Chapter 39: Everything Is Ready
- Chapter 38: Choose Both
- Chapter 37: The Detonation
- Chapter 36: Nuclear Test
- Chapter 35: The Special Individual
- Chapter 34: The Helium 3 Warhead
- Chapter 33: The Argument
- Chapter 32: The Celebration
- Chapter 31: The Lunar Society
- Chapter 30: The Secret of Humanity
- Chapter 29: The Captain’s Shadow
- Chapter 28: The Four Phases
- Chapter 27: Project Noah
- Chapter 26: Project Starfire
- Chapter 25: The First Harvest
- Chapter 24: Fast, Hard And Precise
- Chapter 23: Project Orion
- Chapter 22: Ecstasy
- Chapter 21: Lily’s Theorem
- Chapter 20: At Worst We Die
- Chapter 19: The Death Spiral
- Chapter 18: The Light Curtain
- Chapter 17: The Federation’s Sins
- Chapter 16: The Human Resource
- Chapter 15: The Seeds Of Godhood
- Chapter 14: Great Construction Era
- Chapter 13: A Reason To Live
- Chapter 12: The Folded World
- Chapter 11: Opening The Tomb
- Chapter 10: A Crown Of Ash
- Chapter 9: The Prophet
- Chapter 8: The 44th Floor
- Chapter 7: The First Superhuman
- Chapter 6: Calvin’s Invitation
- Chapter 5: Zero Gravity Combat
- Chapter 4: The Slaughterhouse
- Chapter 3: Plan B: The Hard Choice
- Chapter 2: The Secret Of Moon Base
- Chapter 1: Death Of The Earth