Experiencing MO.CA gives one the feeling of entering a new type of experiencing mobile living: it’s flexible, indoor/outdoor, and entirely off-grid, with the ability to clean its water so one can take endless showers (thanks to a greywater cleaning loop-system running on solar).
As an experiment in how much living a small, low-cost structure can hold, a group of students built a house-on-wheels that expands outward—its glass doors and canvas sides swinging open like sails to catch the sun and breeze.
Designed to blend with its surroundings rather than close them out, the mobile dwelling is not just transportable, but truly self-sufficient: solar-powered, and equipped with a closed-loop water system that recycles greywater for re-use—even enabling an “endless” shower.
Inside, the structure is a study in restraint and purpose. At either end, two solid volumes serve as the core infrastructure: one houses a compact kitchen, bathroom, and utilities; the other holds storage, tools, and an entry door.
Between them, the central space is left open and flexible, with fold-away furniture and a ladder leading to two sleeping shelves above. Everything has its place—and everything is used.
Built by students from the Institute for Advanced Architecture of Catalonia (IAAC) at Valldaura Labs in the forested hills outside Barcelona of Collserola Park, the home is called MO.CA, short for “Mobile Catalyst”—a name meant to reflect its role not just as a shelter, but as a spark for new ways of living lightly and intentionally.
When closed, it’s a compact, protected volume. But when opened, it unfolds—visually and physically—into the landscape around it, becoming less a structure than a platform for inhabiting place.