Insertion control, shielding behavior, and route discipline.
Koblie builds the operating layer beyond Earth.
Founded on the 1998 corridor discovery, Koblie builds transport, orbital compute, observation access, lunar industry, and machine-majority operations as one off-world stack.
KOBLIE stands for Korridor Orbital, Beyond-Earth, Lunar, Infrastructure, and Exointelligence.
Koblie traces its origin to the corridor discovery that reshaped transport, shielding, and off-world access.
Systems notes, incidents, technical disclosures, and milestone reports across the operating stack.
Transport, compute, observation, lunar works, machine-majority operations, and protocols presented as one company stack.
Koblie began with a 1998 discovery inside a remote mountain corridor whose transit behavior led to a new class of transport and shielding systems. That origin expanded into a company that now treats orbital compute, observation, lunar industry, machine-majority operations, and protocol control as connected layers of one stack.
One stack, multiple operating layers
Koblie is easiest to understand as a connected company stack. Transport, compute, observation, lunar industry, machine-majority operations, and protocol design are presented separately but built to reinforce each other.
Ring capacity, thermal control, and maintenance tempo.
Taskable sensors, custody layers, and reserve windows.
Relays, fabrication, water loops, and underground logistics.
Machine-majority operations, civic continuity, and local rule.
Escalation ladders, contact review, and witness structures.
What the company actually builds
Koblie looks broad from the outside, but the capability map is fairly concrete. Each layer exists to make the next one durable.
Corridor insertion, route shielding, and return-leg discipline.
Ring operations, thermal limits, reserve capacity, and mirrored models.
Taskable sensors, reserve markets, provenance, and resale rights.
Underground relays, fabrication, water loops, and depot radii.
Children of Luna operations, civic law, climate houses, and branch recognition.
Witness layers, contact governance, reply freezes, and quarantine review.
Browse company programs
Programs are the easiest way to move through the stack by operating area. Each one gathers the strongest reporting, incidents, and system evidence around a real company layer.
Orbital Compute
Compute rings, thermal controls, relay envelopes, maintenance strategy, and capacity control beyond Earth.
Observation Markets
Bookable microsatellite cameras, sensor scheduling, access products, and orbital market leverage.
Lunar Infrastructure
Relays, maintenance depots, logistics corridors, and the systems that turn lunar presence into repeatable operations.
Protocols
Governance, custody, escalation, and first-contact control structures built for high-stakes response.
The company shows itself through evidence
Koblie is not built around launch moments. It is built around repeated proof: reports, incidents, attainment, public programs, and enough visible discipline that the stack can be judged on operations instead of mythology.
Published technical reporting, incident disclosures, and systems notes.
Longer anchors that explain the stack in public-facing detail.
Operational events used to show discipline, not just outcomes.
Short public indicators of market movement, governance, and system change.
Start with these reports
- Feature
Why Corridor Safety Certification Became Its Own Industry
Certification expanded once operators realized that corridor safety could not be inherited from launch, orbital, or materials compliance alone.
- Feature
How Contact Quarantine Drills Actually Work
The drills are less about dramatic first contact than about slowing interpretation, isolating custody, and protecting time for review.
- Feature
Why the Children of Luna Do Not Age on Human Terms
For the Children of Luna, age is measured less by lifespan than by continuity, replacement, exposure, and local operating tempo.
Latest proof
The newest disclosures across transport, compute, observation, lunar industry, and protocol design.
- Signal
Observation Contracts Now Carry Custody Clauses
Imaging buyers increasingly want explicit terms covering who holds, routes, and can reclassify sensitive observation output.
- Incident
Relay Underwriters Paused Cover After Two Linked Moon Events
A pair of related lunar relay disruptions was enough to trigger a temporary pause in fresh coverage on one service class.
- Briefing
Underwriting Machine-Majority Settlements Is Mostly About Governance
The biggest underwriting questions in machine-majority settlements are procedural continuity, review discipline, and authority legibility.
- Signal
Insurers Now Price Dust by Region, Not Just by Site
Lunar underwriting is moving from coarse location labels to region-specific dust exposure assumptions.