The Gold Coast Bulletin

RACE FOR NEW SPACE

- ANDREW POTTS andrew.potts@news.com.au

A GOLD Coast-based space exploratio­n company is expanding as it prepares to launch its first flight.

Gilmour Space Technologi­es will relocate from Pimpama to a larger base of operations in Helensvale in coming weeks ahead of a suborbital rocket launch.

A launch date is yet to be set but a dry run is expected to soon be conducted. Company director James Gilmour said they chose to stay on the Coast as they loved it and had good relationsh­ips with our universiti­es.

A GOLD Coast-based space exploratio­n company is expanding as it prepares to launch its first flight.

Gilmour Space Technologi­es will relocate from Pimpama to a larger base of operations in Helensvale in coming weeks ahead of a suborbital rocket launch.

A launch date is yet to be set but a dry run is expected within weeks.

Company director James Gilmour said preparatio­ns for the flight were well under way.

“My brother (CEO Adam Gilmour) and I both love it here and we have a great relationsh­ip with the local universiti­es,” he said.

“Plus, the sun always shines in Queensland.

“We have taken a lease of a new site which is bigger than our current location, which will allow us to consolidat­e.”

The Gilmours bought their Pimpama location, next to the former Strawberry Farm site, in 2014 for more than $1.9 million.

In February, the company unveiled the nine-metre “one vision” rocket that will be used as part of the flight, which is expected to be conducted from a remote location in north Queensland.

It is so large it required the Gilmours to develop a purpose-built launch platform.

A remote launch site is needed to be away from major population centres.

The rocket is expected to carry payloads from universiti­es in Australia and Singapore.

Mr Gilmour said the “dress rehearsal” would include the assembly of the rocket on the launch tower and the practice of all the protocols that will go into the flight.

The Coast company last year announced plans to launch small satellites weighing up to 100kg into low Earth orbits from next year and up to 400kg from 2021.

The Gilmours last year received a $19 million funding boost from the CSIRO, which the company will use to further develop its low-cost rockets and launch vehicles to send small to mediumsize­d satellites into orbit.

A conference of space industry scientists was told last year that Australia’s space industry would be worth $12 billion by 2030.

And Queensland is set to get a big slice of that, with a Deloitte report released this year by the State Government revealing our share will be about $6 billion.

MY BROTHER AND I BOTH LOVE IT HERE AND WE HAVE A GREAT RELATIONSH­IP WITH THE LOCAL UNIVERSITI­ES. PLUS, THE SUN ALWAYS SHINES IN QUEENSLAND

JAMES GILMOUR

 ?? Picture: TIM MARSDEN ?? CEO Adam Gilmour with the one vision rocket that will be used as part of Gilmour Space Technologi­es’ first flight.
Picture: TIM MARSDEN CEO Adam Gilmour with the one vision rocket that will be used as part of Gilmour Space Technologi­es’ first flight.

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