SPACE TOURISM: RUSSIA PLANS LUXURY
HOTEL ON THE ISS
Russia's space agency is planning a new luxury
hotel module for the International Space Station (ISS) that will allow space
tourists to visit the satellite for up to a month at a time.
A detailed
business proposal from the Roscosmos State Corporation seen by Popular Mechanics
revealed that the high-comfort module would contain four private sleeping
quarters and would cost visitors between $40 million and $60 million per
trip.
Tourists would also have the opportunity to take part in a space
walk alongside professional astronauts aboard the ISS, as well as have access to
exercise equipment, WiFi and personal washing facilities.
The 51-foot-long hotel module would reportedly
resemble the Science and Power Module (NEM-1), which is scheduled for delivery
to the ISS in 2021.
American astronaut Joseph Tanner waves to the
camera during a space walk as part of the STS-115 mission to the International
Space Station, September 2006. Future space tourists could be able to take part
in space walks with professional astronauts.
NASA/GETTY
IMAGES
The luxury hotel is expected to cost between $279 million and
$446 million to build and will be funded with a mix of private and state
investments. Passengers will be expected to pay for the trip in installments,
beginning two years before their launch date.
Other space tourism
projects currently under development include private ventures by Richard
Branson's Virgin Galactic, Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin, and Russian firm
KosmoKurs.
Earlier this year, Blue Origin unveiled concept images of a
capsule that it hopes will take passengers to the edge of the Earth's
atmosphere, 62 miles above the planet. In a video released last week, Blue
Origin showed what a trip might look like with a test flight using mannequin
passengers in place of humans.
Bezos said one of the biggest draws to his
firm for any potential tourist is that the capsules will feature the "largest
windows ever in space," allowing passengers to fully appreciate the curvature of
the Earth.
"We've been designing the capsule interior with an eye toward
precision engineering, safety, and comfort," Bezos said in March. "Every seat's
a window seat."
Read more: China plans world's biggest rocket in space
tourism race
Blue Origin hopes to take the first paying passengers to the
edge of space within the next two years, while KosmoKurs says it expects to
receive its first passengers in 2020.
Virgin Galactic is yet to set a
date for when its craft will be passenger-ready, though it has already started
accepting money from customers interested in coming aboard.
"When we are
confident we can safely carry our customers to space, we will start doing so,"
the company said in a statement last year. "We feel incredibly honored that our
earliest paying customers already number more than the total number of humans
who have ever been to space."
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