BARCELONA— "Galactic Suite", the
first hotel planned in space, expects to open for business
in 2012 and would allow guests to travel around the world
in 80 minutes.
Its Barcelona-based architects say the space
hotel will be the most expensive in the galaxy, costing $4
million for a three-day stay.
During that time guests would see the sun
rise 15 times a day and use Velcro suits to crawl around their
pod rooms by sticking themselves to the walls like Spiderman.
Company director Xavier Claramunt says the
three-bedroom boutique hotel’s joined up pod structure, which
makes it look like a model of molecules, was dictated by the
fact that each pod room had to fit inside a rocket to be taken
into space.
"It’s the bathrooms in zero gravity
that are the biggest challenge," says Claramunt. "How
to accommodate the more intimate activities of the guests
is not easy."
But they may have solved the issue of how
to take a shower in weightlessness — the guests will enter
a spa room in which bubbles of water will float around.
When guests are not admiring the view from
their portholes they will take part in scientific experiments
on space travel.
Galactic Suite began as a hobby for former
aerospace engineer Claramunt, until a space enthusiast decided
to make the science fiction fantasy a reality by fronting
most of the $3 billion needed to build the hotel.
An American company intent on colonizing
Mars, which sees Galaxy Suite as a first step, has since come
on board, and private investors from Japan, the United States
and the United Arab Emirates are in talks.
If Claramunt is secretive about the identity
of his generous backer, he is more forthcoming about the custom
he can expect.
"We have calculated that there are 40,000
people in the world who could afford to stay at the hotel.
Whether they will want to spend money on going into space,
we just don’t know."
Four million dollars might be a lot to spend
on a holiday, but those in the nascent space tourism industry
say hoteliers have been slow on the uptake because no one
thought the cost of space travel would come down as quickly
as it has.
Galactic Suite said the price included not
only three nights in space. Guests also get eight weeks of
intensive training at a James Bond-style space camp on a tropical
island.
"There is fear associated with going
into space," said Claramunt. "That’s why the shuttle
rocket will remain fixed to the space hotel for the duration
of the guests’ stay, so they know they can get home again."
In an era of concern over climate change,
Galaxy Suite have no plans so far to offset the pollution
implications of sending a rocket to carry just six guests
at a time into space.
"But," says Claramunt, "I’m hopeful that the
impact of seeing the earth from a distance will stimulate
the guests’ urge to value and protect our planet." —Reuters