In 2006, the "DesertSeal" (2004), an extreme environment tent prototype, gained recognition when it became a part of the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. It was featured in the exhibition "SAFE: Design Takes on Risk" (2005), curated by Paola Antonelli.[3] The same year, Vittori and Vogler were honored as "Modern-day Leonardos" by the Museum of Science and Industry during its Leonardo da Vinci: Man, Inventor, Genius exhibition.
In 2007, the Museum of Science and Industry acquired a model of the inflatable habitat "MoonBaseTwo" (2007), designed to facilitate long-term exploration on the Moon. Additionally, the "MarsCruiserOne" (2007), a pressurized laboratory rover for Mars exploration, was showcased at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris as part of the Airs de Paris exhibition.[4]
Paola Antonelli (ed.), Safe: Design Takes on Risk, The Museum of Modern Art, New York 2005, p. 64. ISBN0-87070-580-6
Valérie Guillaume, "architecture + vision. Mars Cruiser One 2002-2006", in Airs de Paris, Diffusion Union-Distribution, Paris 2007, pp. 338–339. ISBN978-2-84426-325-4
Namita Goel, The Beauty of the Extreme, Indian Architect & Builder, March 2006, pp. 82–83.
Arturo Vittori, Architecture and Vision, in L'Arca, October 2004, 196, pp. 26–38.
Un veicolo per Marte. Mars Cruiser One, in L'Arca, April 2007, 224, p. 91.
Ruth Slavid, Micro: Very Small Buildings, Laurence King Publishing, London, pp. 102–106, ISBN978-1-85669-495-7
Wüstenzelt Desert Seal / Desert Seal Tent, in Detail, 2008, 6, pp. 612–614