Tuesday, December 13, 2005

LONDON (AP) — Virgin Galactic, the British company created by entrepreneur Richard Branson to send tourists into space, and New Mexico announced an agreement yesterday for the state to build a $225 million spaceport.

Virgin Galactic also revealed that up to 38,000 people from 126 countries have paid a deposit for a seat on one of its manned commercial flights, including a core group of 100 “founders” who have paid the initial $200,000 cost of a flight upfront. Virgin Galactic plans to begin flights in late 2008 or early 2009.

New Mexico Economic Development Secretary Rick Homans said construction of the spaceport, to be built near the White Sands Missile Range, could begin in early 2007, depending on approval from environmental and aviation authorities.



Virgin will have a 20-year lease on the facility, with annual payments of $1 million for the first five years and rising to cover the cost of the project by the end of the lease.

“Experts predict that thousands of jobs and hundreds of millions of dollars of private investment will be created in the next 20 years as the private sector develops new commercial markets in the space industry in New Mexico,” Mr. Homans said in London. “Virgin is the beginning and many other space companies will follow.”

Virgin Galactic said it chose New Mexico for its headquarters because of its steady climate, free airspace, low population density and high altitude. All those factors can significantly reduce the cost of the spaceflight program.

The spaceport, to be located some 25 miles south of the town of Truth or Consequences, will be constructed 90 percent underground, with just the runway and supporting structures above ground.

Stephen Attenborough, the Virgin Galactic executive in charge of marketing the spaceflights, said the 100 founder members were committed to boarding a flight early in the operations.

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“Many of the others will need to wait until the price comes down and will want to wait for proven reliability and safety,” he said.

Trevor Beattie, a London advertising director who paid for his ticket within days of Mr. Branson’s announcement of the company’s launch, said he was not concerned about safety.

“My only concern is that the longer they leave the launch, the more likely we all are to be hit by a bus,” said Mr. Beattie, who has dreamed of going to space since watching the 1969 moonwalk.

Mr. Branson formed Virgin Galactic after watching SpaceShipOne, a craft designed by Burt Rutan and funded by Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen, become the first privately manned rocket to reach space last year.

Virgin Galactic has a deal with Rutan to build five spacecraft, licensing technology from Mr. Allen’s company, Mojave Aerospace Ventures LLC.

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Virgin Galactic plans to operate its initial flights from the Mojave, Calif., base ahead of the projected opening of the New Mexico spaceport in late 2009 or early 2010.

Virgin Galactic also unveiled its logo — the pupil of an eye incorporating an eclipse. Mr. Branson’s iris will be used for the final design.

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