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Luxury hotels could be launched into Earth's orbit as early as 2021. This is what future space lodging might look like.

Luxury hotels in space could launch as early as 2021 and start accepting guests by 2022, some developers say.

robert bigelow aerospace space operations AP_914378684972

Space tourism is rapidly moving from the realm of science-fiction to reality some developers have promised to launch hotels into Earth's orbit as early as 2021.

In September, NASA astronauts toured a life-sized prototype of an inflatable habitat that could one day house astronauts on a journey to Mars. Bigelow Aerospace, the company behind that prototype, hopes to bring tourists into space as well, and it's not alone. Some developers are already selling reservations at future space hotels.

Designs for such in-orbit lodging vary: Some involve spacious inflatable habitats, others include condominiums, and one concept even promises villas in a rotating, wheel-shaped space station equipped with artificial gravity. Space tourists could one day get an immersive astronaut experience, be wined and dined with incredible views of the Earth, or even play zero-gravity games like Quidditch.

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"Eventually, going to space will just be another option people will pick for their vacation, just like going on a cruise, or going to Disney World," Tim Alatorre, an architect working on a space-hotel project called the Von Braun Space Station, told Dezeen .

Here's what future space lodging might look like.

Samsung/Preconstruct

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In the report , six academics and futurists from the UK predicted coming technological changes including drone-style flying taxis, undersea highways, and luxury space hotels.

These hotels could orbit Earth, the moon, or other planets, generating their own gravity to make the space experience more comfortable, the authors said.

Copyright 2019 Gateway Foundation

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The Gateway Foundation hopes to welcome 100 tourists per week once the station opens. After the structure is fully complete in 2027, they expect it to hold a total of up to 450 people.

The company also plans to open its giant space station to government space agencies.

Copyright 2019 Gateway Foundation

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People would travel from the dock to accommodations in the outer ring through pressurized access tubes.

Copyright 2019 Gateway Foundation

Each module would feature about 5,300 square feet (500 square meters) of floor space, Alatorre said.

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Copyright 2019 Gateway Foundation

"The use of fabrics, warm-coloured lighting and paints, and materials with texture all help us to connect and feel at home," Alatorre told Dezeen . "Because the station will have gravity, there will be sense of direction and orientation that isn't present in the ISS [International Space Station]."

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Copyright 2019 Gateway Foundation

Alatorre said he expects new products, games, and companies to develop in a future industry of low-gravity tourism.

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Copyright 2019 Gateway Foundation

"There will also be many of the things you see on cruise ships: restaurants, bars, musical concerts, movie screenings, and educational seminars," he added .

http://orbitaltechnologies.ru/en/images-of-the-commercial-space-station.html

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The Nevada-based Sierra Nevada Corporation acquired Orbital Technologies in 2014.

http://orbitaltechnologies.ru/en/images-of-the-commercial-space-station.html

Guests would have eaten space food, taken sponge baths, and used vacuum toilets, according to The Christian Science Monitor .

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Orion Span

The station would host six people at a time, including crew members. A 12-day visit would cost at least $9.5 million.

People can already put down an $80,000 deposit to join a waitlist for reservations (whenever they open). Orion Span accepts Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. Within 72 hours of opening the waitlist, the company said it had sold four months' worth of reservation deposits.

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Orion Span

Orion Span would require its space tourists to undergo three months of training before they launch.

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Orion Span

Sleeping pods would offer some reprieve, and high-speed wifi would allow guests to connect with people back home.

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Orion Span

"Our architecture is such that we can easily add capacity, enabling us to grow with market demand like a city growing skyward on Earth," Frank Bunger, Orion Span's CEO and founder, said in a press release . "Future Aurora owners can live in, visit, or sublease their space condo."

MIT MARINA Team: Matthew Moraguez, George Lordos, Valentina Sumini, Samuel Wald, Alex Trujillo, Johannes Norheim, Meghan Maupin, John Stillman, Alpha Arsano, Anran Li, Mark Tam, Zoe Lallas; advised by Prof. Caitlin Mueller.

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The main feature of the team's design is a luxury Earth-facing hotel with eight rooms and a bar, restaurant, and gym.

Called the Managed, Reconfigurable, In-space Nodal Assembly (MARINA), the concept is a hybrid between a hotel and a space station. Rooms would come in the form of inflatable modules attached in a circle around the main spacecraft.

According to the students' plan, the hotel could open to guests by 2025, then get additional modules added over the next 15 years. By 2038, the students say the modules could be repurposed to carry a crew to Mars, where the spaceship could refuel with locally produced methane.

NASA would be a temporary tenant in the MARINA for about 10 years, according to the students' proposal.

The students have even presented an investment plan to the International Astronautical Federation .

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Sierra Nevada Corporation

NASA recently announced plans to test five deep-space habitat prototypes, including the above design from Sierra Nevada Corporation. Called the Large Inflatable Fabric Environment (LIFE), the habitat would expand to be 27 feet in diameter with three floors of living space.

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NASA; Bigelow Aerospace via Imgur

Astronauts have been routinely monitoring the inflatable module, called the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module (BEAM), and conducting tests inside it.

NASA installed it in 2016 to test out the technology for future space missions. The agency renewed the contract two years later, agreeing to keep the module onboard through 2028.

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Bigelow Aerospace via Imgur

Bigelow has proposed attaching the new module to the ISS as well. The B330 could launch at one third of its expanded size and house up to six crew members.

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Bigelow Aerospace

A lunar space station is part of NASA's Artemis program, which aims to send astronauts back to the moon and, eventually, to Mars.

Associated Press

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"This large space station can accommodate four people indefinitely and five people for many months," Bigelow said in a statement to Business Insider in September, adding, "the B330 is an exploration-destined space station, and we are excited about its future."

Associated Press

In a statement , Bigelow said the company has paid deposits and reservation fees for up to four SpaceX launches to the ISS. Each launch would carry up to four people for stays of one or two months.

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These tourist jaunts could begin after NASA certifies SpaceX to fly people to the space station, Bigelow said. NASA has said it would allow the first such "private astronaut" flight to the ISS as early as 2020.

Each seat on the SpaceX flight would cost an estimated $52 million.

Facebook/Bigelow Aerospace

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"Equipped with two galleys, two toilets, enormous cargo space, and two dissimilar propulsion systems, this is the ideal habitat for a long-duration space mission," Bigelow said in September.

Bigelow Aerospace via Imgur

The unit, located at Bigelow's Las Vegas facility, is a steel-hulled variant of the B330 (that's not designed to launch into space).

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Bigelow Aerospace via Imgur

Bigelow is testing such technology as a potential way to provide future astronauts with fresh produce on a long journey to Mars.

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Bigelow Aerospace via Imgur

In the B330's central passage (shown here), supplies would be packed tightly in the deflated unit during the launch phase.

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REUTERS/Steve Marcus

That one has a volume of 2,250 cubic meters (79,400 cubic feet).

REUTERS/Steve Marcus

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"Potentially we think that for the rest of this century, the expandable architecture is where it's at," Bigelow told Reuters .

Rick Guidice/NASA Ames Research Center

Jeff Bezos, the CEO of Amazon and founder of rocket company Blue Origin, wants to enable humanity to spread across the cosmos with spaceship habitats.

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Bezos wants these floating colonies to have ideal, Hawaii-like weather all the time.

Dave Mosher contributed reporting to this story.

See Also:

SEE ALSO: NASA's future missions will explore an icy moon of Jupiter, collect samples on Mars, and more. Here's what's coming in the next 10 years.

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