Virgin Galactic Offers a Look Inside the World’s First Commercial Spaceport

The design-forward departure lounge will be travelers’ gateway to space.

Virgin Galactic Offers a Look Inside the World’s First Commercial Spaceport

The terminal will be part gathering space, part operations base.

Courtesy of Virgin Galactic

Virgin Galactic, Sir Richard Branson’s space tourism project, this week revealed its Spaceport America hub in Las Cruces, New Mexico, which will serve as the main terminal for spaceflight operations. The company anticipates that its first commercial space flights will take place in 2020.

Branson launched Virgin Galactic in 2004 with the dream of bringing travelers into space. He’s finally getting close to actually fulfilling that dream.

The Spaceport terminal includes communal areas that will ultimately be used by Virgin Galactic’s first commercial passengers, as well as by their friends and families.

Spaceport America will be both a departure and arrival lounge as well as home to the space flight operations team.

Spaceport America will be both a departure and arrival lounge as well as home to the space flight operations team.

Courtesy of Virgin Galactic

Designed by Foster + Partners, the facility was created to be an energy-efficient structure that both respects the surrounding desert landscape while remaining a symbol of the future. This will be where Virgin Galactic will prepare its customers to ultimately become astronauts.

The first floor area is meant to encourage community and communications.

The first floor area is meant to encourage community and communications.

Courtesy of Virgin Galactic

The first floor, named Gaia, will be the point of departure and return. It was designed to promote social interaction, community, and communication. The astronauts will be able to share meals and interact with spaceship pilots, rocket engineers, and members of the operations team.

The second floor, which is named Cirrus, is where the spaceflight operations will be based, and it is connected to Gaia through a two-story atrium.

The Spaceport will also house the space fleet. The Virgin Galactic fleet consists of two types of aircraft—carrier aircraft and passenger-carrying spaceships. The carrier aircraft are designed to carry the spaceships up to an altitude of about 50,000 feet where they will be launched beyond the Earth’s atmosphere.

There is a dedicated hangar for the space fleet.

There is a dedicated hangar for the space fleet.

Courtesy of Virgin Galactic

The first of the carrier aircraft, VMS Eve, was introduced in 2008 and has completed a test flight program. The first passenger spaceship, VSS Unity, was unveiled in 2016 and landed from its maiden spaceflight in December 2018.

More than 600 people from more than 50 countries have made a reservation to fly with Virgin Galactic. The 90-minute flight reportedly costs $250,000 per person to have a brief encounter beyond the Earth’s atmosphere.

>> Next: 11 Photos From Around the World for Anyone Who Really, Really Loves Space

Michelle Baran is a deputy editor at AFAR where she oversees breaking news, travel intel, airline, cruise, and consumer travel news. Baran joined AFAR in August 2018 after an 11-year run as a senior editor and reporter at leading travel industry newspaper Travel Weekly.
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