News

WASHINGTON — Bigelow Aerospace has established a space operations subsidiary whose first task will be to study the market for the company’s commercial space stations as it grapples with ...
From Bigelow's Mission Control, NASA connected us with Jeff Williams on the space station. As we spoke to him about Bigelow's inflatable room, he was orbiting the Earth at nearly five miles a second.
Bigelow and SpaceX state in the press release that they plan to market the new services in Japan first, right after the SpaceX attempt to berth Dragon at the International Space Station on May 19.
Bigelow Aerospace has had space modules in orbit since 2006, ... CASIS may well play a similar role for managing commercial space station operations, BSO said in its statement.
Bigelow Aerospace and United Launch Alliance (ULA) have inked a deal to launch two B330 inflatable habitats by 2020. It’s a big step toward “democratizing space.” ...
Bigelow Space Operations says it's targeting a fare of roughly $52 million a seat for rides to the International Space Station that will make use of SpaceX's launch system.
Bigelow envisons the B330 — or multiple B330s joined together, as the habitats are designed with modular expansion in mind — serving as a self-contained commercial space station that could ...
A new deal between NASA and a commercial spaceflight company to add a privately built module to the International Space Station could lead to future uses of the novel space technology beyond low ...
A British company, Space Entertainment Enterprise (SEE), announced Jan. 20 it is working with Axiom Space to add an inflatable module to Axiom’s commercial segment of the station.
To seal the deal that, indeed, the dawn of expandable space structures has arrived and was beyond puffery, Bigelow Aerospace lofted in July 2006 and in June 2007, respectively, its Genesis 1 and ...
The two-week mission, chartered by Houston-based Axiom Space, is the fourth privately financed flight to the International ...
An inflatable module developed by a Las Vegas hotel entrepreneur will be attached to the International Space Station in 2015 for a two-year test run to evaluate the technology's performance in space.