The project plans to meet no lesser a challenge than to call attention to the opportunities of interplanetary expansion through an alternative approach to gravity. The Heliocentric Schools program would establish a research and demonstration centre with a to-scale model of the solar system, in which researchers, teachers and visitors from the 192 UN member states could examine and demonstrate the opportunities afforded by the gravitational paradigm shift in the Heliocentric International Education Centre.
According to the draft design plans prepared by József Finta, the project would comprise research laboratories, homes, hotels, education and service establishments for the international researchers working here, all built around the 30-metre in diameter model of the solar system, the gravitator and the particle detector.
Ozsgyányi plans to finance the large-scale, billion-forint project from the contribution of the UN member states partaking in the research, and he has already contacted several member states regarding his plans. Cegléd and Budapest have both been mentioned as locations for the Heliocentric Schools, and talks have been conducted on the project's feasibility with the chief architect of Budapest as well as the mayor of Cegléd.
