Commercial Company plans Privately-Funded Space Station
Hopes To Have Assembly Underway In 2014
The mockups look like big, white watermelons sitting on a factory floor, but what they represent could be home to as many as 36 people at a time in space.
Bigelow Aerospace is developing what it expects to be the first commercial space station. Built of multiple layers of an expandable Kevlar-like material with the outer layer coated with a micrometeoroid and orbital debris shield, Bigelow hopes to have paying customers aboard the Sundancer space station in five years. Company founder Robert T. Bigelow says he thinks those customers would primarily be nations that are not able to build their own space station from the ground up, so to speak
The New York Times reports that Bigelow already has two test modules in orbit, launched in 2006 and 2007. The Las Vegas, Nevada-based company has a business plan to buy as many as 15-20 rocket launches beginning in 2017, and each subsequent year after that, providing a lot of business for companies like SpaceX on which President Obama has placed much of the responsibility for moving forward with the U.S. space program. Bigelow thinks for the foreseeable future, his company is the only potential buyer for slots on manned space flights other than NASA.
Bigelow made his fortune in real estate, including the Budget Suites of America hotel chain. He has so far spent $180 million of his own money on the private space station concept, and says he's willing to spend nearly twice that again to see the program through.
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