Tatler Singapore

STEP 3: RESEARCH FLIGHTS

-

Frequent fliers are a dedicated lot, obsessed with accumulati­ng status points and the inside scoop on the insand-outs of airline mileage partners, tips for upgrades and where the best business class lounges are located. To reach the stars, however, it really comes down to which billionair­e you admire (or trust your life with) most.

Currently, Space Adventures is the only company to have successful­ly flown tourists to space, including its founder, gaming tycoon Richard Garriott, who spent 12 days in space in 2008 for a slick US$30 million. (His father is the late Nasa astronaut Owen Garriott.) But without its own fleet of rockets, Space Adventures is more of a travel agency, having facilitate­d trips to the ISS via Russia’s Space Programme, Roscosmos, as, up until 2019, Nasa banned commercial flights to the space station. Space Adventures recently announced that it has entered an agreement with Spacex to send travellers into orbit far beyond the ISS, on trips that will last up to five days, as soon as next year.

Musk, the South African billionair­e, founded Spacex in 2002 with grandiose plans of facilitati­ng human settlement on Mars. But for now, he’s focused on space tourism, having announced two years ago that Japanese billionair­e Yusaku Maezawa, founder of fashion retail site Zozotown, will be the first private customer to board a Spacex rocket on a journey around the moon. He hopes to take the trip as soon as 2023 and will follow the same path as Apollo 13’s 1970 voyage.

The 44-year-old Maezawa has money to burn. In 2017, the art collector dropped a cool US$110.5 million on a painting by Jean-michel Basquiat. Now he’s dropping even more to bring up to ten artists, including a painter, a musician, a film director and a fashion designer, to join him. Through this project, which he has dubbed #dearmoon, Maezawa hopes that his planetary posse will “be inspired in a way they have never been before”.

On the project’s website, Maezawa muses, “If Pablo Picasso had been able to see the moon up-close, what kind of paintings would he have drawn? If John Lennon could have seen the curvature of the Earth, what kind of songs would he have written? If they had gone to space, how would the world have looked today?” Hey, big spender, ever wonder what a journalist would write if she were invited along?

Meanwhile, Richard Branson founded Virgin Galactic in 2004 with the aim to be the world’s first commercial spaceline. Characteri­stically ambitious, Branson suggested that a maiden flight could have happened as early as 2009, but it hasn’t happened yet. In 2014, VSS Enterprise, an experiment­al space flight test vehicle operated by Virgin Galactic, suffered a horrific crash, ultimately delaying its Spaceshipt­wo voyage that was originally slated for 2015.

But things got back on track after Spaceshipt­wo flew to the edge of space with two test pilots in December 2018 and made a successful test flight in February 2019, when two pilots and one passenger enjoyed four minutes of microgravi­ty before gliding back to Earth. Virgin Galactic passengers can expect a similar experience once commercial flights become available. To date, over 600 tickets have been sold.

Not to be outdone, Jeff Bezos, despite making his billions through Amazon and having financed the renaissanc­e of The Washington Post, has said that his space venture, Blue Origin, is his “most important

Orion Span’s Aurora Station could be the first-ever hotel in space Right: NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken prepare to board the Spacex Falcon 9 rocket bound for the Internatio­nal Space Station in May 2020

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Left:
Left:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Singapore