My travels take me to Hexcel's manufacturing plant near Cambridge, and my attention is caught by a poster opposite the caff. The reason I'm interested is that laminate honeycomb panels make for the ideal material for the deck and sides of the flat-cat.
The UK side stems from the efforts of a Dr Bruyne in pioneering glues for aviation in the 1930s, so that for instance De Havilland would laminate plywood and balsa core for the Mosquito. His company would be taken over by CIBA, the Swiss firm into glue, and together they would be acquired by Hexcel in California.
Two things of note here, in that Hexcel not only provided the material for the feet of the first craft to land on the moon, and also in so far as their first product was to be incorporated in snow-skis. Besides this, the 747 was the first to feature honeycomb in its cabin floor, whilst the round-the-world Voyager designed by Burt Rutan used such material extensively for its stiffness and levity.
Such things are all around us ~ and underneath us when we travel by air ~ and I am sure that there is a home for them in the flat-cat. You saw how we laminated core foam for domestic use with a hardwood ply from a company in the UK Lake District, and honeycomb might mean that sooner rather than later we may not need to.