The Denver Post

Colorado-built Dream Chaser inches closer to future landings in Florida after space mission

- By Joe Rubino Joe Rubino: 303-954-2953, jrubino@denverpost.com or @rubinojc

It’s built in Louisville, but the Dream Chaser commercial spaceship is creeping closer to an eventual landing on a storied runway in Florida, according to Sierra Nevada Corp.

On Monday, Sierra Nevada announced that federal aviation authoritie­s have granted the Cape Canaveral Spaceport Shuttle Landing Facility in Florida a license to serve as a re-entry site for commercial spacecraft.

The facility at Kennedy Space Center was purposebui­lt to allow orbiting spacecraft to land on its runway. NASA space shuttles wrapped up 78 missions there before that program came to an end in 2011, according to Sierra Nevada.

Now, as Sierra Nevada preps the winged craft it had dubbed “America’s Spaceplane” for a planned 2022 flight to the Internatio­nal Space Station, the company is celebratin­g the prospect of future landings there.

“The opportunit­y for our spaceplane to land on this historic runway where so many shuttle missions did before underscore­s both the practical advantages of Dream Chaser and its timehonore­d place in NASA’s space exploratio­n heritage,” company CEO Fatih Ozmen said in a statement.

Further approvals are required, according to Sierra Nevada. The company is still working with the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to obtain licensing to operate Dream Chaser reentries in Florida, the company said in Monday’s release.

During a preview event highlighti­ng the craft at Sierra Nevada’s Louisville factory in 2019, representa­tives from the company talked about how the 30foot-by-15-foot Dream Chaser was designed to ensure a smooth ride for cargo including materials from space station experiment­s.

Of course, it also designed to provide a smooth ride and landing for future astronauts.

“I was fortunate to land on this historic runway for my three NASA shuttle missions, and I understand how a spaceplane provides a safer and more benign entry experience for humans, as well as delicate payloads,” Sierra Nevada Space Systems executive and former astronaut Janet Kavandi said in a statement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States