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Space
tripping 08
Virgin
Galactic shoots for the stratosphere
Space
tripping 08, by Janice Kleinschmidt and Abbie
Kozolchyk, Forbes Traveller, August 6,2008
Sir
Richard Branson stole NASAs thunder. The day
the venerable agency marked its 50th anniversary,
the media instead heralded new, non-NASA developments
in aviation. The previous day, July 28, 2008, Bransons
eight-year-old Virgin Galactic enterprise unveiled
the mother ship that will take paying passengers into
orbit.
The
most important thing is to get people up there safely
and make sure they have a return ticket, said
Branson, sporting a white Banana Republic shirt with
the Virgin Galactic logo on the chest and a DNA
of flight graphic on the back yoke. He'd just
spent a few hours entertaining a gaggle of reporters
at Mojave Airport in the California high desert. Safety
was a hot topic, but Virgin is very much about fun.
I wouldnt be surprised if [on commercial
space flights down the road] we had a flight attendant
massaging upside down in the air, he added.
His
mother, Eve, was on hand to christen the mother ship
named in her honor. Everything he does is fun,
she said. He doesnt do anything the normal
way."
Perhaps
thats why Branson has hosted customers who have
committed to the $200,000 ride into sub-orbital space
aboard VGs SpaceShip Two on his private island
of Necker and to Sweden to see the aurora borealis.
And perhaps anticipation of news coming from the Monday
morning press event led to impulse ticket buying by
nearly two dozen future astronauts over the weekend,
bringing the number of reservations to 270.
For
$200,000, passengers wont even get free peanuts
and sodas. In fact, their diets will be controlled
during preflight training to make sure they
feel great during the flight, says Virgin Galactic
commercial director Stephen Attenborough. A couple
of days preflight preparation will include a
medical check, bonding with the Virgin Galactic team,
review of safety procedures and G-force training.
Our goal is to make sure they get off the plane
with a big smile on their face, Attenborough
says. If the flight doesnt do the trick, surely
the post-flight celebration and astronaut-wings ceremony
will.
Although
reservations can be made for as little as a $20,000
deposit, the first 100 passengers who pay in full
christened the "Founders"
will be given seats according to lottery, with six
passengers per trip. Those scheduled for subsequent
flights will train by going up with SpaceShip Two
to about 50,000 feet in Virgin Mother Ship Eve; SS2
passengers ascend another 310,000 feet. According
to Attenborough, friends and family may potentially
ride in the mother ship (each fuselage also holds
six passengers). In time, he adds, it
could become a fun place to do some Gs.
As
for traveling attire, the crafts are pressurized,
so passengers need not wear bulky, unflattering spacesuits.
Instead they will be issued something that looks
great and is functional, says Attenborough.
The
interior is still in development, though it promises
to be roomy. The cabin could take 11 people
to space, but Richard wants to sell only window seats,
says Virgin Galactic president Will Whitehorn. Adds
Branson's nephew, Ned Abel Smith, We dont
want to take away from the experience by over-designing
the interior. Still, noted designer Philippe
Starck is on-board as a consultant.
Virgin
isn't the only player in the commercial space flight
game. Space Adventures has been delivering private
citizens to the International Space Station since
2001, when billionaire Dennis Tito took the first
trip. (Tito's ticket cost just $20 million; the ride
now runs a cool $30 million.) Next up is Richard Garriott,
son of NASA astronaut Owen Garriott, scheduled to
fly in October. Passengers may eventually be allowed
to take a walk outside the space station for an additional
$15 million. As Space Adventures CEO Eric Anderson
notes, that's something very few professional
astronauts have done.
Anderson
even hopes to whirl customers around the moon, where
only 24 humans have been. At some point in the next
four years, he expects, number 25 will pony up $100
million for that bragging right. This is the
most expensive travel offering I know of, he
says.
At
$4 million (give or take), a vacation at Galactic
Suite is a comparative bargain. Projected to open
in 2012, the first space resort promises to orbit
15 times a day at 18,000 mph. The trip requires an
18-week commitment, most of which is spent at a James
Bond-style space camp on an undisclosed Caribbean
island. Galactic Suite is really tapping into
the fantasy aspect, says Michael Yessis, co-editor
of World Hum, a Travel Channel Web site. Who
wouldnt want to be launched into orbit Bond-style,
saying something pithy in a tux or evening gown?
Not
everyone thinks space travel should be a luxury endeavor.
Its time to open the space frontier to
citizen explorers, says Buzz Aldrin, the second
man to set foot on the moon and a dignitary at the
unveiling of Virgin Galactics mother ship. Working
through his ShareSpace Foundation, Aldrin hopes to
put space travel within anybodys reach. We
intend to launch the ShareSpace Adventure Awards program
to award winners with actual trips in space."
Branson
has his own incentive for the lower-flying passengers
of his Virgin America airline. Elevate
frequent flyers who earn 10,000 points will have an
opportunity to compete in a series of challenges,
the winner of which wins a seat on SpaceShip Two.
Now that's a serious upgrade. (Credit:
Travel stories from msnbc.com)
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