Have you registered for the 19th Annual Great Moonbuggy Race?

Racers from the Huntsville Center for Technology ready for the 2011 Great Moonbuggy Race.
CREDIT: NASA/MSFC/David Higginbotham

Dreaming of being an astronaut is a phase just about everyone goes through at one point in their lives.

It’s a much smaller amount of people who decide to peruse that dream when they grow-up. While not everyone might go into space, everyone has the opportunity to race on the moon…. well almost. For the last 19 years, NASA has given high school and college teams from across the globe a chance to compete against each other for the title of “Greatest Moonbuggy of the Year”.

The rules of the “Great Moonbuggy Race” are simple. Teams of six to seven students are challenged to engineer a two passenger, light-weight, quickly assembled and human powered vehicle that can withstand the rigors of an all-terrain race. The fastest buggy through the course, taking penalties into account, wins. The idea is to have students re-engineer a moon buggy with the same engineering constraints as those faced by the Apollo-era lunar rover developers in the 1960’s.

Only eight college teams competed in the first Moonbuggy race in 1994. Since then high school teams have joined the fun and the competition has dramatically increased. Last year during the 18th annual race, 70 teams from around the world entered buggies into the race. Officially sponsored by the NASA Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate and corporately sponsored by many of the biggest space technology companies, monetary awards are provided for the top buggy in each category (college and high school) and high schoolers receive an additional paid trip to Advanced Space Academy provided by ATK. Other prizes are awarded for everything from “lightest vehicle” to “Best race day repair” to “Best Rookie team”.

Related Post

The 19th annual Great Moonbuggy Race is currently scheduled for April 13-14 at Marshall Space Flight center. There is still time to create a team of your own and enter. Registration closes for international teams on January  7th and for US teams February 4, 2013 at 3PM CST. Check out the event page and lets see those moon buggys!

Liked it? Take a second to support GeekMom and GeekDad on Patreon!

Share
Published by
Tags: NASA

Recent Posts

The Winter Goddess by Megan Barnard

The fight between winter and the onset of spring is something we know well in…

February 18, 2026

If you are looking for a way to escape this never ending January, a trip…

January 30, 2026

‘Mouse Guard: Dawn of the Black Axe’: Interviewing David Petersen on the Black Axe’s Origin Story

Out today is the newest Mouse Guard book, 'Mouse Guard: Dawn of the Black Axe'—and…

January 20, 2026

The New Rubik’s x Tetris Cube Is a Fun Mashup of ’80s Toys

If you like some extra squares in your cubes, check out the new Rubik's x…

December 22, 2025

Skye Sweetnam, Sumo Cyco, and the Power of Community

Like many others, I jumped directly into my Apple Music Replay this year filled with…

December 17, 2025

GeekDad/GeekMom Holiday Gift Guide 2025: Stocking Stuffers

It's time to stuff the stockings that were hung with care with our must-have stocking…

December 15, 2025