Hotels in Space

By | February 23, 2005

Here we go again:

Still, when it comes to grand ambition, the impresarios of the Strip are mere pikers next to Budget Suites owner Robert Bigelow. For his next hotel enterprise, Bigelow is looking beyond the bright lights of Las Vegas—beyond Earth’s atmosphere, in fact. He is actively engaged in an effort to build the planet’s first orbiting space hotel. Bargain-basement room rate: $1 million a night. For its water show, this hotel will have all of Earth’s blue oceans flying past its windows at 17,500 miles an hour. Guests on board the 330-cubic-meter station (about the size of a three-bedroom house) will learn weightless acrobatics, marvel at the ever-changing face of the home planet, and, for half of every 90-minute orbit, gaze deep into a galaxy ablaze with stars.

Well, it sounds great, but I stand by my position that the first hotel in space should be sub-orbital. Stationary, in fact. Okay, the tourists won’t “get” to experience zero-G, but they will have the same great view.

Oh, and I think they could get a night in a sub-orbital airship hotel for about $10,000 per night. Or less. Ironically, unlike Bigelow’s proposal, the airship hotel would be the Budget Suites of space.

via GeekPress

Best high pic.jpgUPDATE FROM STEPHEN:

Here’s the suborbital view that Phil was talking about. This picture was made by JP Aerospace during an April 2004 mission.

JP Aerospace is working toward the creation of a “Dark Sky” Station that would serve as a way station for an “Airship to Orbit” space program (pdf link). Such a way station is necessary because a sturdy airship is needed to navigate in the lower atmosphere and an entirely different kind of airship is needed to complete the journey into orbit.

And it would be an obvious tourist attraction.

  • blacknail

    The problem with the whole hotel-in-space thing is that eventually the novelty will wear off and the guests will be begin wondering what’s in the mini-bar and where the damn pool is. Yeah, Honey, the view is great, but this Snickers cost 500 bucks! And even if they manage to float a pool up there, how long can you lay out. Really! Without any ozone protection, you’d be a piece a bacon in about 5 seconds. Of course, you wouldn’t have to worry about getting that bikini wax before ya go.

  • https://www.blog.speculist.com Phil Bowermaster

    Well, at $10K a night, I doubt we’ll have too many folks hanging around long enough to get bored. But what the heck — we could always put a casino up there!

  • Tasha9503

    Hotels in space, feasible and affordable.
    Hotels in space
    For sale now
    A place, in space, to go.
    tasha9503.com

  • Tobias Holbrook

    Hotels and Tourism in Nearspace are the next logical step beyond Terra. We should develop our shore before selling spots on cruise ships. Space is our new ocean, Nearspace is our new shore.

    An egg shape, with the hotel built inside the envelope, would likely be the best shape for the hotel. Guests would get a view unobstructed by the aerostat envelope. The egg shape offers (likely) the best trade off between stability, volume, and comfort.

  • http://www.youtube.com/user/tasha9503#play/all/favorites-all/0/xfts-XxyWYY TrevorHMCooper

    1995 technology and six launches can put one of these HotelsInSpace.

    http://www.youtube.com/user/tasha9503#play/all/favorites-all/0/xfts-XxyWYY

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivHAO96FIiw Trevor HM Cooper

    1988 till 1995 I found all the reasons we could not do this.
    In 1995 the grease problem was salved. Now we can build these.