試す 金 - 無料
First commercial space station is readying for launch
BBC Science Focus
|Summer 2025
For the first time in human history, a space station built by a startup, not a nation, is set to enter low Earth orbit
-
In 2026, a team of astronauts will float inside a glossy white cylinder orbiting hundreds of kilometres above Earth. But this won't be the International Space Station (ISS). It'll be Haven-1 — the world's first commercial space station, built by a private aerospace company called Vast.
Expected to launch in May 2026 on a SpaceX Falcon 9, Haven-1 represents a radical shift in the way people will live and work in space.
"If we're able to do this before we win the NASA contract [to replace the ISS] using our own funding, we'll be not only the world's first commercial space station, but the only one of the expected bidders to have done that," Vast's CEO Max Haot told BBC Science Focus.
KEEPING THINGS SIMPLEVast's approach is fast, focused and unashamedly pragmatic. Instead of building a sprawling orbital laboratory, the team at Vast has designed a tightly constrained system that does just enough – safely. At 45m³ (1,590ft³), Haven-1 has roughly the interior volume of a small tour bus. Its life-support system borrows from earlier NASA tech, running on a simpler 'open loop' design like that used on the Space Shuttle.
Crew members won't stay for months here, like they do on the ISS. Instead, four astronauts will visit for roughly 10 days at a time, arriving on a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft. Over Haven-1's three-year orbital lifetime, only four such missions are planned.
"The number one priority for Haven-1, as a demonstration of a minimum viable product space station, is safety," Haot says. "Number two is to make it happen within this unprecedented timeline. A rapid timeline also means lower cost."
このストーリーは、BBC Science Focus の Summer 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
BBC Science Focus からのその他のストーリー
BBC Science Focus
World's biggest cobweb is home to 100,000 spiders
Spiders don't normally create such large colonies, so there's no need to worry about finding one in your basement
1 min
February 2026
BBC Science Focus
A dementia vaccine could be gamechanging – and available already
Getting vaccinated against shingles could protect you from getting dementia, or slow the progression of the disease
1 mins
February 2026
BBC Science Focus
DATA IN SPACE
An unusual spacecraft reached orbit in November 2025, one that might herald the dawn of a new era.
7 mins
February 2026
BBC Science Focus
Climate change is already shrinking your salary
No matter where you live, a new study has found warmer temperatures are picking your pocket
4 mins
February 2026
BBC Science Focus
A MENTAL HEALTH GLOW-UP
Forget fine lines. Could Botox give you an unexpected mental health tweakment?
3 mins
February 2026
BBC Science Focus
Most people with high cholesterol gene don't know they have it
Standard testing struggles to detect the condition
1 mins
February 2026
BBC Science Focus
HOW CAN I BOOST MY IQ?
If you're serious about getting smarter, it's time to ditch the brain-training apps
4 mins
February 2026
BBC Science Focus
Humans are absolutely terrible at reading dogs' emotions
Think you can tell how our furry friends are feeling? Think again
1 mins
February 2026
BBC Science Focus
HOW TO TEACH AI RIGHT FROM WRONG
If we want to get good responses from AI, we may need to see what it does when we ask it to be evil
3 mins
February 2026
BBC Science Focus
What Australia's social media ban could really mean for under-16s
Many people think social media is bad for our kids. Australia is trying to prove it
5 mins
February 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

