Open Source
All drawings, data and decisions, published openly.
Everything we develop is published openly: drawings, calculations, simulations, measurement data, growing protocols, failures and successes. We do not earn licence fees. We win when others build.
What we publish
Drawings, data, decisions.
- All technical drawings (CAD, 2D, 3D)
- All calculations (thermal, structural, energy)
- All simulations (CFD, parametric studies)
- All measurement data from field validation
- All growing protocols and results
- Decision logs and governance documents
Supplier specifications are published after formal engineering partner agreements are finalised — typically post-contract signature.
When we publish
Each track publishes when its model is locked.
Each track publishes when it reaches concept-locked status with complete model documentation.
- Arctic Ilua (Track A) — concept-phase publication on engineering partner signature (2026).
- Ilua Sunyard (Track B) — full publication post-field-validation (expected 2027).
- Light & Energy (Track C) — components publish as they mature (2026–27).
Decision logs and field measurements publish continuously as the work progresses.
Why open source
If it works in South Greenland, it can work across the Arctic.
Many Arctic communities are too small to justify bespoke engineering from scratch. Open documentation makes it possible to build once, learn in public, and let others adapt the work to their own local conditions.
Open source is also our strongest authority signal: anyone can inspect our work. We assume that visibility itself improves quality.
Where to find it
github.com/agroprojekt-ilua
Repositories are seeded; full content begins publishing as Phase 1 advances.