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Deep Sleep Cocoon. Grey edition
01  |  06

Deep Sleep Cocoon. Grey edition

Built to help you sleep anywhere on Earth. Or in outer space.
Sale price  £238 Regular price  £795 70% off
Model is 6ft 1 / 185cm with a 39 inch / 99cm chest, and wears size Medium.
  • Segmented, magnetic hood with visor
  • Hood has space for noise cancelling headphones
  • Material is highly abrasion resistant

Built to help you sleep anywhere on Earth or in outer-space, the Deep Sleep Cocoon is a self-contained microhabitat that’s a cross between a cocoon and a spacesuit.

However advanced we become, the human body needs rest and sleep in order to function at a high level, and this will become even more critical as we travel off our planet. But when you’re trapped in an environment you can’t control, and it’s cabin crew, scientific protocol or deep space deciding what light, sound and ambient temperature you’re exposed to, sleeping can be hard. Long-haul flights, the International Space Station and the first flights bound for Mars are not designed for sleep.

So we turned to nature to design a microhabitat for a human being – mimicking adaptable and protective structures like the exoskeleton of a woodlouse and the cocoons spun by moths and caterpillars. Designed for physical and psychological comfort in inhospitable places, the cocoon strips out light like an isolation tank, has space for noise cancelling headphones, reduces your exposure to unnecessary stimulus, and while you can see out, no-one can see in.

Technical details

Material made in Switzerland by Schoeller
Main fabric composition: 81% polyamide, 10% elastane, 9% polyurethane
Mesh visor fabric composition: 100% polyester
Main fabric is highly resistant to rips and abrasion
Jacket is water repellent, windproof and breathable
Segmented hood which can be folded down and fastened in place with magnets
Breathable and elastic mesh visor offers visibility out but not in
Visor is not water repellent
Articulated back
Two-way front zipper
2 side pockets
2 invisible front pockets on left chest and right middle
1 inside pocket
Metal snap fasteners at the cuffs
Metal cord adjusters on the inside hem with
Cordura pull tabs
Machine Wash at 30°C
Do not Dry Clean
Material made in Switzerland by Schoeller
Main fabric composition: 81% polyamide, 10% elastane, 9% polyurethane
Mesh visor fabric composition: 100% polyester
Main fabric is highly resistant to rips and abrasion
Jacket is water repellent, windproof and breathable
Segmented hood which can be folded down and fastened in place with magnets
Breathable and elastic mesh visor offers visibility out but not in
Visor is not water repellent
Articulated back
Two-way front zipper
2 side pockets
2 invisible front pockets on left chest and right middle
1 inside pocket
Metal snap fasteners at the cuffs
Metal cord adjusters on the inside hem with
Cordura pull tabs
Machine Wash at 30°C
Do not Dry Clean
01 | 03

Why deep sleep is important

We’re making prototype clothing for space travel with a simple mission – to create the optimum state for someone to be able to perform successfully in space. Sleep is as critical as food, water and air. It helps restore the body’s immune, nervous, skeletal and muscular systems, and these in turn maintain your mood, memory and cognitive function. This restoration takes place mostly during deep sleep, when your body temperature, heart rate and brain’s oxygen consumption decrease. Sleep deprivation on the other hand shortens your attention span, increases anxiety and impairs your memory.

The harsh realities of sleeping in space

When Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin climbed back onto the Eagle to return to Earth after the moon landing, sleep was out of the question. The noise of pumps filled their tiny cabin, bright warning lights couldn’t be dimmed, and even the window shades were glowing as intense sunlight shot through them. While closing their space helmets shut out the noise, it activated the cooling systems that had been vital on the moon’s surface but now kept them too cold to sleep. The sleeping conditions we take for granted on Earth, like quiet and darkness, are far from guaranteed in space.

Astronauts on the International Space Station experience 16 sunrises a day

Alongside eye masks and earplugs every ISS crew member has a cupboard-sized sleeping pod with a sleeping bag fixed to the wall with a bungee cord to combat microgravity and air currents. The onboard lighting produces different light spectra, from daytime light, to blue-enriched light to increase alertness or shift circadian rhythms, and blue-depleted light for before sleep. Despite this, 75% of crew report using sleeping pills which induce sedation rather than deep sleep. And this impacts cognitive ability and alertness in space, where there’s little room for error.

Sleep deprivation on the journey to Mars

Any crew heading to Mars or beyond face hundreds of consecutive days in isolation and outside of Earth’s rhythm of day and night. In 2010 the Mars-500 Mission sealed six participants in an isolation chamber in Russia for 520 days to simulate a full mission. Four of the six developed sleeping problems, and the one who suffered the most chronic sleep deprivation was singled out as being responsible for the majority of mistakes made on tests used to measure concentration and alertness. The risk of accidents in a real-life situation with a ship millions of miles from Earth is of course much higher.

Built to help you control your environment

Sleeping can become extremely difficult when you’re in an environment that you can’t control, with cabin crew, scientific protocol, or deep space deciding what light, sound and ambient temperature you are exposed to. To combat this you need to create a micro-environment that gives you physical and psychological comfort. To solve this engineering challenge with a single piece of clothing we turned to nature and looked at structures that are highly adaptable, protective, and allow creatures to metamorphose from one state to the next.

The hood folds over like a space helmet

Like the visor on a space helmet, the hood is built from five different segments which can fold down and over your face when you need to rest or sleep. While the hood is soft, it holds its shape to create space around your face. The hood fastens with four sets of magnets which are built into the material and simply snap into place. As a self-contained environment that you can take with you anywhere, it brings routine, warmth and comfort without having to rely on a specific set up – like a bed, a sleeping bag or night-time.

It works like a normal jacket during the day

You can wear the Deep Sleep Cocoon like any normal jacket when you’re not resting – just like a woodlouse can happily walk around in its protective suit. Depending on your needs, the hood can be fastened into a series of different positions. The visor can be clipped back and away inside the hood. The collar can be left open with the visor down. You can also undo the side snappers so that hood and visor fold away entirely. But its adaptable engineering helps you transition fast when you want to turn the lights out.

The visor means you can see out but no-one can see in

While the face of the hood looks identical to the rest of the jacket it’s actually a blacked-out visor based on the outer layers of a cocoon. It’s made from a soft, breathable and stretchy mesh fabric that allows you to see out, but no-one to see in. This shot was taken through the visor to show you how much visibility you’ll have when you’re looking through it. You’ll still be able to see out well enough to use your phone or laptop, but it strips out light to make daylight feel more like dusk or night-time. When you’re not using it, the visor can be clipped away underneath the hood.

How it works for travel on Earth

We’re not quite ready for Mars yet, so the Deep Sleep Cocoon is built for travelling and testing during journeys back on Earth too. Zipping the cocoon up on a plane flight is like hanging up a Do Not Disturb sign. Bright lights disappear. Everything gets quieter. And people leave you alone. The jacket is insulated which makes it ideal for the temperature drops on overnight flights, and the hood is large enough to fit any headphones underneath.
The human body is the most fragile system in space

Why it’s hard to sleep in hostile environments

Sleep disturbance is a universal problem for people in extreme environments – from polar explorers and researchers to astronauts on space shuttle flights and on the ISS. The foundations of good sleep, like avoiding bright lights, creating routines, avoiding stress, getting enough exposure to sunlight early in the morning, and finding dark, quiet and cool places may all be impossible. Your circadian rhythm which regulates your body’s sleep and wake cycles is easily thrown off by light exposure, isolation and confinement, all of which are waiting for us in space.

Light has the most profound impact on sleep

We haven’t always slept like we do today. Before the introduction of artificial light during the Industrial Revolution, sleeping twice a day was common. Many nomadic and hunter gatherer societies still sleep on and off during day and night, and under experimental conditions people sleep and wake more frequently. With our internal circadian clock profoundly influenced by changes in light, even small amounts of light at night can suppress melatonin secretion and increase how awake you are. So the Deep Sleep Cocoon is built for shift-pattern sleeping that we may well revert back to in space.

Made from Swiss materials to help you sleep anywhere

The Deep Sleep Cocoon is built from an advanced three-layer fabric designed and built in Switzerland. The outer layer is extremely abrasion resistant. The middle layer has a waterproof and windproof membrane. And the layer next to your skin is a soft nylon. It means that while we’re waiting for the first flights to Mars, it can cope with harsh training conditions here on Earth – from sleeping on the rocky floors of lava caves and sparse Arctic stations, to trucks and planes in transit. Built for inhospitable and unpredictable environments, it’s designed to help you sleep anywhere.

Five pockets and metal detailing

The Deep Sleep Cocoon comes with five pockets. There are two side pockets on the outside of the jacket, one internal pocket, and two hidden pockets, one on the left chest and one just to the right of the front zip. The two-way front zipper lets you undo the jacket from the top and the bottom at the same time, allowing you to decide just how cocooned you want to be. Metal adjusters on the inside hem let you tighten the jacket at the waist, and come with cord adjusters built from Cordura. The cuffs are fitted with metal snap fasteners.
The Deep Sleep Cocoon is just the start of human hibernation

Size + fit

The Deep Sleep Cocoon is designed with a regular fit.

Size XS S M L XL XXL
Fits chest 83 - 90 91 - 98 99 - 106 107 - 114 115 - 122 123 - 130
Fits waist 71 - 76 76 - 81 81 - 86 86 - 91 91 - 96 96 - 101
Size XS S M L XL XXL
Fits chest 33 - 36 36 - 39 39 - 42 42 - 45 45 - 48 48 - 51
Fits waist 28 - 30 30 - 32 32 - 34 34 - 36 36 - 38 38 - 40