A partnership between two U.S. aerospace companies could eventually
bring passenger trips to private space stations, officials of the
companies said. SpaceX, maker of the Dragon space capsule scheduled to
take crews and supplies to the International Space Station, and Bigelow
Aerospace said they have formed a partnership to market flights to
Bigelow’s proposed private stations, looking for international customers
that could include national space agencies, companies and universities,
Florida Today reported Thursday.
“Both companies were founded to help create a new era in space
enterprise,” SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell said in a statement.
“Together we will provide unique opportunities to entities whether
nations or corporations wishing to have crewed access to the space
environment for extended periods.” Las Vegas-based Bigelow says its
proposed BA 330 inflatable habitats will provide usable volume larger
than an ISS crew module with support for six crew members. Bigelow and
the Hawthorne, Calif., SpaceX said they would focus their marketing
efforts on international customers, and Bigelow has already announced
preliminary agreements with potential customers in Japan, Australia,
Singapore, Sweden, Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Dubai.
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