Author Topic: Space Tourism Predictions?  (Read 9758 times)

Offline Space Ghost 1962

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Space Tourism Predictions?
« on: 06/14/2017 05:35 pm »
Make one of my rare predictions (one on the average every five years - not big on prognostication) here - feel free to call me on it.

The first/only space tourism (in the next ten years) will be to the vicinity of the moon.

add:
(NB - this was an "after the fact" thread that started in the Blue Origin News and Update one, as an oblique comment.)

And Coastal Ron correctly added definition's of "tourism" and "adventurer" further down, from which I've abstracted:
... tourism is defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as:

"Tourism is travel for pleasure or business; also the theory and practice of touring, the business of attracting, accommodating, and entertaining tourists, and the business of operating tours."

I have advocated that the two people that will orbit the Moon in a SpaceX Dragon are not tourists, but adventurers. And Dictionary.com defines "adventure" as:

1. an exciting or very unusual experience.
2. participation in exciting undertakings or enterprises: the spirit of adventure.
3. a bold, usually risky undertaking; hazardous action of uncertain outcome.
4. a commercial or financial speculation of any kind; venture.


So to me someone that participates in an adventure is not a tourist, and is not engaging in tourism.

From that standpoint I would say that the sub-orbital rides that Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin plan to offer fall into the "tourism" category, but the two people paying for the first-of-it's-kind round the Moon trip are "adventurers".

Given those definitions, recast my casual prediction as meaning "space tourism" is really "space adventurism", and "tourism" stands way in the future.
« Last Edit: 06/15/2017 05:39 pm by Space Ghost 1962 »

Offline high road

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Re: Re: Blue Origin Update and Discussion Thread
« Reply #1 on: 06/14/2017 05:58 pm »
Bold statement indeed. Does that include NS?

Edit: given the redefined goal posts: I personally expect plenty (YMMV) of adventures in short hops, next to no adventures lasting longer than a single orbit due to no infrastructure for tourists and other infrastructure remaining insanely expensive, and even less tourism to the moon.

Sounds pessimistic? Opening up new commercial markets happens in steps, and despite the hype, we're only taking the second step (commercial satellites and now lower launch costs) of a series that is bound to be much, much longer.
« Last Edit: 06/16/2017 11:07 am by high road »

Offline guckyfan

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Re: Re: Blue Origin Update and Discussion Thread
« Reply #2 on: 06/14/2017 06:25 pm »
Bold statement indeed. Does that include NS?

I would rather ask. Does it include Soyuz to the ISS? Because that can conceivably happen.

Offline Space Ghost 1962

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Re: Re: Blue Origin Update and Discussion Thread
« Reply #3 on: 06/14/2017 06:50 pm »
Just what was said as in "all".

NS - revenues/regulatory issues mean those potential ~$100M flights of sats matter more.

Soyuz/ISS - closer to matter, on the edge of happening. But again the costs to maintain the capability (in this case training and the displaced revenue of Soyuz seats screw up the cash flow too much). Best case to restart tourists to ISS would be if a) Russian sanctions lifted and/or b) Starliner/Dragon start flying crew to ISS - cannot predict those effectively to rule out entirely. But still unlikely.

Also, sense of the customer base for such is that once a "Apollo moment" enters the field, the calibration for this "extreme sport" appears to be altered. Keep in mind that they climb Everest and have no stomach for K2.

Offline envy887

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Re: Re: Blue Origin Update and Discussion Thread
« Reply #4 on: 06/14/2017 07:27 pm »
Make one of my rare predictions (one on the average every five years - not big on prognostication) here - feel free to call me on it.

The first/only space tourism (in the next ten years) will be to the vicinity of the moon.

So you don't think Blue and VG will be in position to fly paying customers in the next 2 years? They both seem to be getting pretty close, and neither is likely to run out of money or simply give up. So why wouldn't they fly?

Offline Space Ghost 1962

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Re: Re: Blue Origin Update and Discussion Thread
« Reply #5 on: 06/14/2017 08:27 pm »
The first/only space tourism (in the next ten years) will be to the vicinity of the moon.

Are you including all of the potential sub-orbital players in this prediction?
Yes.

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E.G., you're saying that Virgin Galactic's architecture is flawed beyond any design redemption after 12 years of development and despite currently flying hardware?
Not quite.

The issue is the way in which the accident with VG's Eve has altered the environment for such a business, in manifold ways I refuse to detail further.

As to VG's "overly greedy" (too much payload for the "technology") architecture, there are many ways to "fix" it. However, have little confidence that they will do so, soon. Goals are set wrong.

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And that despite access to unlimited financing, they will never have a joyride with paying customers?  ???
They do not, and never had "unlimited financing". The operation is and has been significantly under financed.

Mister Moneybags here is frugal on novel business opportunities, and not well advised IMO.

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At least Whitesides is now talking like a CEO instead of an Branson ad man:

"Now, the newest incarnation of SpaceShipTwo is deep into its second attempt to be certified as safe for passengers. When will that happen? “When we’re ready,” says Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides. This is how they’ll get there."
Yes, an improvement.

But it will take a restructuring and a different "approach" to recover from Branson's needless idiocies.

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Except for VG, I'd tend to agree with you otherwise. I don't think NS will fly any more than Falcon 1 did, and there are no signs the other companies will fly before they run out of money, IMHO.
Falcon 1 is an apt analogy. And a lot of finance that was chasing deals here were chastened by the accident.

As to VG, it's not that they can't but that they won't. Rolls up to undoing Branson's misperception dating back to SS1. He's driven like all businessmen, and so injures his own ventures by finding it hard to come to terms with.

Bezos makes similar mistakes elsewhere.

So you don't think Blue and VG will be in position to fly paying customers in the next 2 years? They both seem to be getting pretty close, and neither is likely to run out of money or simply give up. So why wouldn't they fly?
Doubt either will fly paying customers, for different reasons.

VG because they cannot rescope due to Branson's flaws. Blue because it's too great a distraction from NG and both an actual revenue as well as being able to do in space industrial development. Bezos has a taste for a real space adventure and sees no need to suffer for smaller game.

Others because the floor has been removed below them.

Perhaps Musk, because he offers to place wealthy adventurers where govt superpowers cannot. That suits those egos as worthy of a life's risk.

edit: typos. (Time to get another keyboard again, this one's dropping letters from wear)
« Last Edit: 06/14/2017 09:22 pm by Space Ghost 1962 »

Offline savuporo

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #6 on: 06/14/2017 09:44 pm »
How about none of those are going to fly tourists. However, China will fly one to orbit right after their robot lands on the far side of the moon
« Last Edit: 06/14/2017 09:45 pm by savuporo »
Orion - the first and only manned not-too-deep-space craft

Online gongora

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Re: Re: Blue Origin Update and Discussion Thread
« Reply #7 on: 06/15/2017 03:50 pm »
NS - revenues/regulatory issues mean those potential ~$100M flights of sats matter more.

NS still seems to fit with the overall vision of Blue Origin, even if the potential profits from it may be small or nonexistent.  They intend for human spaceflight to be a core competency of their organization.

Offline Space Ghost 1962

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Re: Re: Blue Origin Update and Discussion Thread
« Reply #8 on: 06/15/2017 04:17 pm »
NS - revenues/regulatory issues mean those potential ~$100M flights of sats matter more.

NS still seems to fit with the overall vision of Blue Origin, even if the potential profits from it may be small or nonexistent.  They intend for human spaceflight to be a core competency of their organization.
Correct.

But at the moment, it's role likely is as a learning exercise, booster recovery, capsule evaluation, and capsule escape test.

They've gotten what they needed out of it to step up to orbital flight, with a recoverable booster unmanned payloads but with the means to support HSF subsequently.

Closer to competing with SX for possibly ISS CRS/CC missions long term.

Now, if you discover you can't outspeed SX on flight cadence (Musk claims he's moving to 24hr as a goal), and your downrange-only orbital recovery always puts you behind SX RTLS, where does that leave you?

It means that your "bread and butter" is larger payloads, where your more powerful single stick LV picks off these less frequent missions. Two advantages over Musk's vision - less wear/tear/reprocessing/recovery loss, and a hydrolox US for high C3 missions (Moon, Mars, ...).

None of this is helped by further NS, which either is abandoned or shuffled off to another business unit, for marginal return.

Back to OT - the issue is on the marketing side (wealthy joyrides for "extreme sports" legacy) and on the total cost (fixed+regulatory+liability). They are willing to risk life for one-shot fame, and the market size doesn't grow large enough with volume to compensate for the growing costs.

Space tourism is a very acute shaped market pyramid. The "needle top" is all the value one can get at the moment. If Musk does ITS successfully, he turns this tip into another market entirely, and that's his bootstrap for populating planets.

Likely it's Bezo's also to similarly exploit in a different way.

It is unclear what this means for NS, VG, and Branson. Perhaps too much of a "carnival ride", where the economics are unstable.

Offline tater

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #9 on: 06/15/2017 04:46 pm »
Still, the "first/only" prediction requires that BO flies not even one tourist on NS, and it is simply discontinued as a crew vehicle (outside of any internal testing with employees).

That seems far-fetched to me. I understand that Bezos might not be wed to sunk cost notions, but Bezos said their model is to operate NS with rapid turn arounds to provide operational experience. The idea that they wouldn't get even one taker seems unlikely, even though I agree that suborbital spaceflight won't be much of a thing unless the price becomes far lower than any of us currently imagine it to be.

Offline Coastal Ron

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #10 on: 06/15/2017 04:58 pm »
Make one of my rare predictions (one on the average every five years - not big on prognostication) here - feel free to call me on it.

The first/only space tourism (in the next ten years) will be to the vicinity of the moon.

I like to define things before I speculate, especially when not everyone agrees with what a word might mean. For instance, tourism is defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as:

"Tourism is travel for pleasure or business; also the theory and practice of touring, the business of attracting, accommodating, and entertaining tourists, and the business of operating tours."

I have advocated that the two people that will orbit the Moon in a SpaceX Dragon are not tourists, but adventurers. And Dictionary.com defines "adventure" as:

1. an exciting or very unusual experience.
2. participation in exciting undertakings or enterprises: the spirit of adventure.
3. a bold, usually risky undertaking; hazardous action of uncertain outcome.
4. a commercial or financial speculation of any kind; venture.


So to me someone that participates in an adventure is not a tourist, and is not engaging in tourism.

From that standpoint I would say that the sub-orbital rides that Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin plan to offer fall into the "tourism" category, but the two people paying for the first-of-it's-kind round the Moon trip are "adventurers". Which to me is a big difference.

Does that help clarify the discussion going forward?
If we don't continuously lower the cost to access space, how are we ever going to afford to expand humanity out into space?

Offline tater

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #11 on: 06/15/2017 05:21 pm »
At the risk of going down a rabbit hole, I would say that for the purpose of this conversation a tourist is any human going to space who is not doing so as part of their work. It gets complicated if you think of teachers, or government officials who have flown on Shuttle, so perhaps a requirement that the flight be paid for by an entity that is not a government.

I'm not specifically addressing the best word for the people in question, just the pigeonhole to put the type of flight into. In that sense even if we stipulate "adventurer" for 2 SpaceX moon travelers, they still fall under "space tourism" as far as I see this conversation.

To go much further, I think we'd need to set some training limit to call someone a tourist. When I get on a plane to Italy with my family, the sum total of training required is to pay attention to the safety notice at the beginning of the flight. I suppose at some point, the label "tourist" might require a similarly nonexistent level of vetting and training.

Offline Jim Davis

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #12 on: 06/15/2017 05:31 pm »
I have advocated that the two people that will orbit the Moon in a SpaceX Dragon are not tourists, but adventurers.

"Adventurer" works better than "tourist" but I think "joyrider" works better yet. All are much better than the sterile, legalistic "spaceflight participant".

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And Dictionary.com defines "adventure" as:

The most memorable definition of "adventure" I've come across is "Terror and misery in retrospect." I've been trying off and on to find the person who came up with it without success.

Offline Svetoslav

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #13 on: 06/15/2017 05:32 pm »
Throwing my two cents here : I think that there every human being going to space who is not doing so as part of their work is a space tourist.

And any human being going 20kms above the surface is a near-space tourist :)

Offline Darkseraph

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #14 on: 06/15/2017 06:15 pm »
Defining the passengers of the SpaceX Lunar Mission as adventurers is splitting hairs. With all these activities, including suborbital tourism, there is significant danger and it's far from the ordinary. Those on board are not pilots or flight engineers and for all intents and purposes can just sit back and enjoy the ride. I don't see the problem with calling them tourists.

Now for some predictions:

Blue Origin flies the first paying suborbital tourists in Q4 2018
Virgin Galactic flies paying customers second in Q2 2019
SpaceX Lunar Mission happens NET Q4 2019, but more likely 2020.

"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." R.P.Feynman

Offline Space Ghost 1962

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #15 on: 06/15/2017 08:49 pm »
Thank you Coastal Ron for the worthy addition.

A little background. Have professionally analyzed the "space tourism" market. As a professional, you don't have the option to rename/redefine.

The key point to stress is the reasons one would do such activity. Even have members of my extended family who have climbed Everest (and many other similar mountains, considering K2 as well), as well as ones who are considering such "adventures" well above the Kármán line. As well as having certain "elevated" experiences myself when young and too stupid to have fully appreciated the risks ...

So access to those in the market segments is real and immediate.

(I'll share an amusing aside. The aerospace engineers and space/planetary ones are adversive to all of these endeavors, although entirely encouraging of others doing so. They also tend to fly the more reliable transportation providers and aircraft, and can tell you why they are reliable.)

Back to tourism - its part of the "hospitality market", where events, even stressful ones, are usually in some way attached to resorts/hotels.

So Ron, suggest that Bigelow would likely be the best authority on actual "space tourism" (and when it'll happen).

Because a "space resort" as a hub/destination for such would be the "magnet" for such. Imagine eventually some kind of "space Disneyland" as the ultimate direction, way beyond Space Mountain. Or perhaps a hotel on the Moon, with scenic mountains illuminated by earth shine.

Back to adventurism:

The point is a worthy and lifelong accomplishment. For those of extreme wealth, there is a "power" aspect to it as well, to trade in the risk of life.

Those on board are not pilots or flight engineers and for all intents and purposes can just sit back and enjoy the ride. I don't see the problem with calling them tourists.

Have you ever trained for spaceflight? Been in a hyperbaric chamber, without a mask? Do you know what it's like to prepare for Denali/K2? Neither is jump in and sit back and enjoy the ride.

You're either ignorant, sarcastic, or attempting humor unsuccessfully. Either way not helpful.

And while there are a herd of paying idiots attempting a peculiar form of suicide on Everest in the Ice Falls, the ones likely for that moon ride is nothing of the kind.

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Blue Origin flies the first paying suborbital tourists in Q4 2018
If so, they are running behind on certain activities/filings by about 1.5 years.

There's always the theory of a waiver from a sympathetic ear I suppose.

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Virgin Galactic flies paying customers second in Q2 2019
They are 3.5 years behind to that. Even more dubious, because they haven't caught up to where they were, prior to the fatal accident. Also, Scaled is no longer in the picture.

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SpaceX Lunar Mission happens NET Q4 2019, but more likely 2020.
Look at FH, Dragon 2, and RD programs for likelihood of meeting that. More like 2022 by current rate of closure.

But this one most likely.

Offline Coastal Ron

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #16 on: 06/15/2017 09:11 pm »
Back to tourism - its part of the "hospitality market", where events, even stressful ones, are usually in some way attached to resorts/hotels.

I disagree with that completely. You don't have to rent a room to be a tourist.

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So Ron, suggest that Bigelow would likely be the best authority on actual "space tourism" (and when it'll happen).

Not sure why, since Bigelow's initial market is sovereign states, not space hotels - at least the last time I heard.

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Because a "space resort" as a hub/destination for such would be the "magnet" for such. Imagine eventually some kind of "space Disneyland" as the ultimate direction, way beyond Space Mountain. Or perhaps a hotel on the Moon, with scenic mountains illuminated by earth shine.

My observation on tourism is that it is an outgrowth of industry and commerce, not a leader. For instance, Disneyland could not have been built without the surrounding area already being developed and a ready supply of workers who had reasonably affordable & comfortable places to live.

A resort in space any time in the near future is going to resemble a cruise ship, in that it will have to be completely self-sufficient. But here on Earth cruise ships can pull up to a pier in a well developed port city and completely change out the crew and resupply in less than a day. And if there are any issues with the ship there are large amounts of technical people nearby that can swarm the ship and fix things quickly.

I just don't see that being able to be duplicated in space until we have a large population in space - which won't happen anytime soon.

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Back to adventurism:

The point is a worthy and lifelong accomplishment. For those of extreme wealth, there is a "power" aspect to it as well, to trade in the risk of life.

I'm reminded of a conversation in the movie Jurassic Park:

John Hammond: All major theme parks have delays. When they opened Disneyland in 1956, nothing worked!

Dr. Ian Malcolm: Yeah, but, John, if The Pirates of the Caribbean breaks down, the pirates don't eat the tourists.

I think the difference between tourism and adventurers is that tourism has little risk. Sure, you could die on a roller coaster, but the odds are probably lower than you dying from many other routine things like getting hit by a car in the parking lot of the theme park.

For an adventurer though there is far more risk, especially if they are doing something not yet proven by others. That's why I view activities like Virgin Galactic sub-orbital rides are tourism, but at least the first private flyby of the Moon as being done by adventurers.
If we don't continuously lower the cost to access space, how are we ever going to afford to expand humanity out into space?

Offline tater

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #17 on: 06/15/2017 09:28 pm »
A little background. Have professionally analyzed the "space tourism" market. As a professional, you don't have the option to rename/redefine.

So what is the precise definition, or at least precise enough for this conversation? Anyone not professionally going into space, anyone in space who is not specifically contracted or employed by a national space program?

I think any such definition is fine, but it might be best if everyone is on the same page.

Question: If employees of a company like BO were to ride NS into space, would they be tourists? Would they be if they were not actively functioning as test pilots---is there anything such crew could do, even if they were "on the clock," since the entire flight is automated?

I think that BO is likely to send a few people up on NS at the very least, which would necessarily happen before they get NG up and running.

Offline Darkseraph

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #18 on: 06/15/2017 10:01 pm »
^
In an admittedly blunt way, I am pointing out those who pay for these trips are not professional astronauts. Training aside, they're essentially just passengers and won't be responsible for either piloting or repair of these systems. The criteria that one must have trained for spaceflight to have a valid opinion on this is admittedly a very high bar (exceedingly few of the global population has had that luxury) and it would almost certainly rule out the majority of people on these boards from participating in further discussions.

Spaceflight remains an incredibily risky endeavour, but there is no real need to attach a more lofty term to space tourists just because the level of risk is higher than other forms of tourism. It is also very unlikely to catch on given most of the media is happy to call them space tourists for the past two decades. If a new name must be used, call it Extreme Tourism much like the term used for higher risk sports.

"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." R.P.Feynman

Offline tater

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #19 on: 06/15/2017 10:12 pm »
That's why a precise definition is useful (even if one just for the content of this thread).

If the definition requires effectively zero vetting or training (like getting on any airliner, or warnings posted at certain amusement park rides), then I agree with Space Ghost 1962, I suppose, as any flights within the next decade will include more training and vetting than "none." If the definition is any broader than that, then I disagree.

That said, NS is likely pretty close to no training---and that training might have more of a marketing purpose, since it extends the "vacation" to X hours of training, instead of paying a small fortune for 12 minutes, or however long the flight lasts.
« Last Edit: 06/15/2017 10:13 pm by tater »

Offline Space Ghost 1962

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #20 on: 06/15/2017 10:42 pm »
Back to tourism - its part of the "hospitality market", where events, even stressful ones, are usually in some way attached to resorts/hotels.

I disagree with that completely. You don't have to rent a room to be a tourist.
No, you don't. But you often do. Usually as part of a package. When you pay for something big, it usually comes as a package...

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So Ron, suggest that Bigelow would likely be the best authority on actual "space tourism" (and when it'll happen).

Not sure why, since Bigelow's initial market is sovereign states, not space hotels - at least the last time I heard.
A precursor in the hospitality market is to arrange venues for matters of state. Originally many embassies were run , or in, or converted hotels. Same business.

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Because a "space resort" as a hub/destination for such would be the "magnet" for such. Imagine eventually some kind of "space Disneyland" as the ultimate direction, way beyond Space Mountain. Or perhaps a hotel on the Moon, with scenic mountains illuminated by earth shine.

My observation on tourism is that it is an outgrowth of industry and commerce, not a leader. For instance, Disneyland could not have been built without the surrounding area already being developed and a ready supply of workers who had reasonably affordable & comfortable places to live.
Tourism and hospitality are among the oldest businesses. They predate modern economies.

(Not to boor you, but I was ignorant as well about this, and had a crash course on it on a long Pacific flight ending with a visit to one of the largest resorts in the world. But if you bother to look into it, yes, you'll understand what I've said above.)

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I just don't see that being able to be duplicated in space until we have a large population in space - which won't happen anytime soon.
Nor I.

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Back to adventurism:

The point is a worthy and lifelong accomplishment. For those of extreme wealth, there is a "power" aspect to it as well, to trade in the risk of life.
...
I think the difference between tourism and adventurers is that tourism has little risk.
... and little training/necessary involvement.
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Sure, you could die on a roller coaster, but the odds are probably lower than you dying from many other routine things like getting hit by a car in the parking lot of the theme park.


To make it safe, survivable, and durable.

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For an adventurer though there is far more risk, especially if they are doing something not yet proven by others. That's why I view activities like Virgin Galactic sub-orbital rides are tourism, but at least the first private flyby of the Moon as being done by adventurers.
From my sources, understand that both VG/BO will require training and evaluation of passengers in advance of flight.

From my contacts with probable "further beyond Kármán line", they will actually have flight duties, as on Soyuz, and will require similar training as well.

Perhaps, like with the Autopia, it will evolve into a ride with a line. Or, like with a cruise ship/airliner, a staff of trained stewards that will keep you from killing yourself during the flight.

A little background. Have professionally analyzed the "space tourism" market. As a professional, you don't have the option to rename/redefine.

So what is the precise definition, or at least precise enough for this conversation? Anyone not professionally going into space, anyone in space who is not specifically contracted or employed by a national space program?
Flight above the Kármán line as an avocation.

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Question: If employees of a company like BO were to ride NS into space, would they be tourists?
By market definition, yes.

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Would they be if they were not actively functioning as test pilots---is there anything such crew could do, even if they were "on the clock," since the entire flight is automated?
Be careful, this is not so cut and dried.

Wouldn't you say that ISS transit on Soyuz is likewise ... and yet it takes considerable training before a flight, even for a paid "tourist"? And much of all spaceflight, even for the лоцман, is automated.

There is much more to it than the experience.

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I think that BO is likely to send a few people up on NS at the very least, which would necessarily happen before they get NG up and running.

Was surprised by that as well. Yet, according to Bezos/BO, they were going to have weekly flights for almost a year leading up to human occupancy. There's nothing to suggest resumption of even a part of this.

So you stick a few seats in, get a volunteer, and press the button?

^
In an admittedly blunt way, I am pointing out those who pay for these trips are not professional astronauts.
They do not have the vocation of astronaut.

Many of them are private pilots, and a few are former military pilots.

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Training aside, they're essentially just passengers and won't be responsible for either piloting or repair of these systems. The criteria that one must have trained for spaceflight to have a valid opinion on this is admittedly a very high bar (exceedingly few of the global population has had that luxury) and it would almost certainly rule out the majority of people on these boards from participating in further discussions.
Am trying to communicate about this. Has a bearing on my OP. Which otherwise seems to be misunderstood.

Even if you are not "working the controls realtime", you do need training to comport/safe yourself for such a journey. Including things like eating, cleaning, and toilet

(You and Ron can debate semantics of what to call it and why. Then you can communicate that genius to others worldwide. I will stand by in awe and rapture at the accomplishment ...  ::) )

Offline tater

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #21 on: 06/15/2017 11:25 pm »
Yeah, I was expecting a busy summer of test flights which have not materialized. Not least because I will engage in my own tourism and drive down there (it's about a 5-6 hour drive from my house) at some point when they show signs (and a NOTAM).

I guess I will find it surprising if they don't start back up with flights soon.

Offline Coastal Ron

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #22 on: 06/16/2017 04:16 am »
Back to tourism - its part of the "hospitality market", where events, even stressful ones, are usually in some way attached to resorts/hotels.

I disagree with that completely. You don't have to rent a room to be a tourist.
No, you don't. But you often do. Usually as part of a package. When you pay for something big, it usually comes as a package...

Ah, now I understand what you're saying, since in some countries, like the UK and Japan, a significant amount of vacation travel that involves air travel is booked as part of a package.

That is not the case here in the U.S. though. Not that it doesn't happen, just that the vast amount of tourism is individually booked and not purchased as part of a package.
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So Ron, suggest that Bigelow would likely be the best authority on actual "space tourism" (and when it'll happen).
Not sure why, since Bigelow's initial market is sovereign states, not space hotels - at least the last time I heard.
A precursor in the hospitality market is to arrange venues for matters of state. Originally many embassies were run , or in, or converted hotels. Same business.
Countries are not planning to lease Bigelow stations to open up embassies in space - they are doing it for scientific reasons.
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Because a "space resort" as a hub/destination for such would be the "magnet" for such. Imagine eventually some kind of "space Disneyland" as the ultimate direction, way beyond Space Mountain. Or perhaps a hotel on the Moon, with scenic mountains illuminated by earth shine.

My observation on tourism is that it is an outgrowth of industry and commerce, not a leader. For instance, Disneyland could not have been built without the surrounding area already being developed and a ready supply of workers who had reasonably affordable & comfortable places to live.
Tourism and hospitality are among the oldest businesses. They predate modern economies.

(Not to boor you, but I was ignorant as well about this, and had a crash course on it on a long Pacific flight ending with a visit to one of the largest resorts in the world. But if you bother to look into it, yes, you'll understand what I've said above.)

I may not have mentioned this previously, but I've had the chance to spend some time in the modern tourism industry, including attending their largest conferences. My perspectives are born out of studies of the business models for various segments of the tourism marketplace, including adventure, experiential, concierge, itinerary services, itinerary suggestion services, and the like.

Modern day tourism is relatively benign from a risk standpoint, especially since the vast majority of it takes place in places that are well trod. The Great Smokey Mountains are the most visited U.S. national park, London is the most visited city in the world for tourism, etc.

But if you look at any tourism activity or destination, there is a HUGE amount of infrastructure that supports it. And that does not exist in space, nor would it be easy to set up.

Which is the other factor, business risk. Other than Virgin Galactic, the tourism industry is typically shy of creating brand new tourism categories that are both expensive and risky. Robert Bigelow, who is an expert in the lodging industry here on Earth, is not planning to build lodging in space, he's building science laboratories for lease.

Which is why I don't think space tourism will be a factor anytime soon.

I think that's as much as I can add to this topic...
If we don't continuously lower the cost to access space, how are we ever going to afford to expand humanity out into space?

Offline Chasm

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #23 on: 06/17/2017 09:56 pm »
Say there is space tourism in the first place. ;)
I can see NS flying tourists for quite some time. Offering a gradual approach to customers, allowing them to self select.

Fly on a Zero G flight, get the ticket reimbursed if you book NS.
Fly on NS, get the ticket reimbursed if you book a rounds around the ball on NG.
And so on and so forth.

Might take longer than expected though.
The prices for science payloads on NS are high and there is always the risk that a flight goes wrong.

Offline FutureSpaceTourist

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #24 on: 06/21/2020 04:55 pm »
Three years from the creation of this thread and nothing yet ...

Bumping today for the SS1 anniversary

https://twitter.com/gregwautry/status/1274734317021716481

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16 years ago I sat on the @MojaveAirport flight-line & watched commercial human spaceflight launch! Thx to Burt Rutan, Paul Allen, Patti Grace Smith :(, Stu Witt & others for giving me a front row seat to history. I propose June 21 be national #NewSpaceDay! @kevinomccarthy
« Last Edit: 06/21/2020 04:57 pm by FutureSpaceTourist »

Offline GWH

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #25 on: 06/22/2020 04:59 pm »
Virgin Galactic getting into orbital space tourism to the ISS (ride by others):
https://twitter.com/virgingalactic/status/1275023567831404545

Offline FutureSpaceTourist

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #26 on: 09/26/2020 09:29 pm »
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How SpaceX, Virgin Galactic, Blue Origin and others compete in the growing space tourism market
PUBLISHED SAT, SEP 26 2020  9:30 AM EDT  UPDATED 5 HOURS AGO
Michael Sheetz
@THESHEETZTWEETZ

There’s an emerging industry thought to be only science fiction not too long ago that’s close to becoming a reality: space tourism.

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/26/space-tourism-how-spacex-virgin-galactic-blue-origin-axiom-compete.html

https://twitter.com/thesheetztweetz/status/1309860710307049472

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Space consultancy @NSR_SatCom broke out its expectations for suborbital vs. orbital tourism, by 2028:

Suborbital: $2.8 billion market, $10.4 billion total revenue

Orbital: $610 million market, $3.6 billion total revenue
cnbc.com/2020/09/26/spa…

I think those suborbital numbers are far too high. This:

https://twitter.com/lauraforczyk/status/1309912166607269890

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Suborbital - no way. That's an "in what reality?" prediction.

Orbital - maybe. Unlikely, but still within the realm of possibility.

Honestly, analysts especially need to stop overhyping these markets. These predictions that come out range from poor to ridiculous.

twitter.com/lauraforczyk/status/1309914033282220032

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Speaking as a space industry analyst who studies emerging space markets and is writing a book on space tourism... Just, like, this article is ridiculous. It's not your fault Michael. People are telling you really off-the-wall things they want investors to hear to sell reports.

https://twitter.com/lauraforczyk/status/1309914514540957696

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The problem is short-term thinking. "We can make a poor prediction now because no one will remember it was wrong 3 years from now." Meanwhile, it will increase news coverage, investments, and sales.

Space tourism is a long-term market with a long history. Perspective is key.
« Last Edit: 09/26/2020 09:33 pm by FutureSpaceTourist »

Offline TrevorMonty

Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #27 on: 09/26/2020 11:11 pm »
Orbital market predictions seem realistic. SpaceX already have 4 -6 missions booked for next two years. Missions to ISS are limited to 2 a year till Axiom start adding modules in 2024-25. At which stage they can handle a few missions a year. These are likely to be combination of short and long stay. Short stay of week or two for tourists and 3 month stays for astronaut training which will be paid for by their country.

Limiting factor for freeflyer missions is vehicle production and launch rate. While I'd like to go to space, being stuck in capsule with 3 others for 5 days isn't that appealing. Will be interesting see how many of these sell. I'd rather wait and pay bit more for luxury of  spacestation.

An intermediate solutuion is using Cygnus to provide extra living space for freeflyer missions. Cygnus would stay in orbit for year or two supporting multiple missions. If Cygnus stays close to ISS could also deliver crew to ISS if there is failure of capsule.
« Last Edit: 09/26/2020 11:15 pm by TrevorMonty »

Offline Coastal Ron

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Re: Space Tourism Predictions?
« Reply #28 on: 09/26/2020 11:32 pm »
At this point in history we're not talking "tourism" in the normal sense, since tourists rarely do anything that involves significant risk.

What we're talking about is more akin to Adventure travel, or as a stretch, Experiential travel.

Adventure travel is:
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...a type of niche tourism, involving exploration or travel with a certain degree of risk (real or perceived), and which may require special skills and physical exertion.

So that limits the potential market immediately to people that can accept risk, and are in good physical shape. Plus they have to be able to wear a spacesuit for hours at a time, and deal with direction for others.

Then you have to find people in that category that ALSO have enough disposable money for such activity.

I tend to agree with Laura Seward Forczyk in thinking that the market is not very big. Certainly not big enough to sustain itself outside of government funded facilities and support systems.
If we don't continuously lower the cost to access space, how are we ever going to afford to expand humanity out into space?

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