What's new

Meet Starlab: Private space station planned to fly in 2027

Hamartia Antidote

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 17, 2013
Messages
35,188
Reaction score
30
Country
United States
Location
United States

There could be a lot of commercial action in low Earth orbit later this decade.
An artist's illustration of the Starlab private space station, a joint project of the companies Nanoracks, Lockheed Martin and Voyager Space. Starlab will be operational by 2027, if all goes according to plan.

An artist's illustration of the Starlab private space station, a joint project of the companies Nanoracks, Lockheed Martin and Voyager Space. Starlab will be operational by 2027, if all goes according to plan. (Image credit: Nanoracks/Lockheed Martin/Voyager Space)

Earth orbit may be a hive of commercial activity a few years from now.
Nanoracks, Voyager Space and Lockheed Martin announced today (Oct. 21) that they plan to get a free-flying private space station up and running in low Earth orbit (LEO) by 2027. The outpost, called Starlab, is envisioned to be a tourist destination as well as a research and manufacturing hub that helps foster the growth of an off-Earth economy.
"To meet U.S. government, international space agency and commercial needs in space, these industry leaders will develop Starlab specifically to enable the growing space economy and meet pent-up customer demand for space services such as materials research, plant growth and astronaut activity," the three companies said in a press release.

The four-person Starlab station will be lofted in a single launch, which is expected to take place in 2027. The outpost will feature a habitat module with 12,000 cubic feet (340 cubic meters) of internal volume, a power and propulsion element, a laboratory setup and a large external robotic arm to service payloads and cargo, according to Nanoracks' Starlab page.

For comparison, the International Space Station (ISS) has 32,333 cubic feet (916 cubic meters) of internal volume, which is equivalent to that of a Boeing 747 jet.

Starlab will have some competition for customers, if all goes according to plan. For example, Axiom Space intends to launch one private module to the ISS in 2024 and three more by the end of 2027, representatives of the Houston-based company told Space.com via email. That quartet will be capable of separating from the larger mothership and operating as a free-flying commercial space station.

Colorado-based Sierra Space is also developing plans for a private orbiting outpost, and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin has expressed interest in doing so as well.

NASA wants such commercial stations to pick up the slack from the ISS, which is likely to be retired in the 2028-to-2030 timeframe. The venerable outpost, which has hosted rotating astronaut crews continuously since November 2000, is currently approved to operate through the end of 2024, but an extension is widely expected.

NASA has established a project called Commercial LEO Destinations (CLD) to help facilitate the transition. CLD will work via a two-stage strategy modeled on that employed by the agency's commercial cargo and commercial crew programs, which spurred the development of private ISS-visiting spacecraft such as SpaceX's Dragon capsule.

"In the first phase, NASA will pursue multiple funded Space Act Agreements for early concept development of commercial destinations," agency officials wrote in a CLD update earlier this year. "In the second phase, NASA intends to purchase destination services when such services become available for purchase."
 
.
Lots of promises...

2016 Fantasy: Hundreds of solar roofs promised.
2021 Reality: Elon Musk on trial for fraud in the solar city deal

2013 Fantasy: Hyperloop with supersonic trains moving cross country
2021 Reality: Las Vegas Loop with Teslas driving in unsafe tunnels at 30 mph

2017 Fantasy: Tesla semi taking deposits and will be ready in 2019
2021 Reality: Tesla semi is vaporware

My predictions for this station:

1. not in physical production by 2023
2. not in flight testing by 2025
3. not in space as promised by 2027
4. will cost at least $100 million even if cancelled
5. if it is in space by even 2030, will not make even 1% of cost back from tourism.
 
.
Lots of promises...

2016 Fantasy: Hundreds of solar roofs promised.
2021 Reality: Elon Musk on trial for fraud in the solar city deal

2013 Fantasy: Hyperloop with supersonic trains moving cross country
2021 Reality: Las Vegas Loop with Teslas driving in unsafe tunnels at 30 mph

2017 Fantasy: Tesla semi taking deposits and will be ready in 2019
2021 Reality: Tesla semi is vaporware

My predictions for this station:

1. not in physical production by 2023
2. not in flight testing by 2025
3. not in space as promised by 2027
4. will cost at least $100 million even if cancelled
5. if it is in space by even 2030, will not make even 1% of cost back from tourism.

Exactly.
 
.
An artist's illustration of the Starlab private space station, a joint project of the companies Nanoracks, Lockheed Martin and Voyager Space. Starlab will be operational by 2027,


What does this StarLab thing have to do with Elon Musk????
Why are you focusing on him???




How is Elon Musk even relevant to StarLab?
It isn't even run by him. WTF are you two yapping about? Did you even read the article before quickly opening your mouths? Look at the part in red I highlighted.
 
Last edited:
.
Back
Top Bottom