UAV Corp. is opening a new
division within their Gulf County operations that aims to use their
existing airship technology to make space travel more accessible, the
company announced on Dec. 21.
The new division, the Space Division
for Space Tourism, is not the first to venture into taking tourists to
space, but UAV Corp’s CEO, Mike Lawson, said he hopes by lowering the
cost of the travel that the company can remain competitive.
“After the successful flight tests of
the Air Force prototype electric airship in September 2021, UAV Corp’s
Skyborne Technology continued its effort to develop a ‘SkySpace’ airship
that would be designed to take tourists to space at a low cost,” Lawson
said.
While UAV Corp’s $50,000 goal for per
passenger cost is still very expensive, it is somewhere between a fifth
and a ninth of the cost of similar travel with other companies,
depending on the travel date.
“Our company is at the beginning of
our growth stage that other commercial space tourism companies were a
couple years ago,” said Billy Robinson, the company’s chairman, in a
press release. “The goal is to target our cost per passenger to under
$50,000 a person opening up the space experience to what we are dubbing
the ‘People’s Space Experience.’”
Some of the systems that will be
onboard the SkySpace airship will be tested in the first half of 2022
with the launch of the new SA 70-12 DATT airship under contract with
Gulf Coast State College, funded by Florida’s Triumph Fund.
It has been a year and a half since
Wewahitchka-based Skyborne Technologies, which is owned by UAV Corp.,
began work on the DATT SA-70-12, which aims to improve communication
abilities during natural disasters.
In September, the airship underwent a
successful test flight, and Lawson said that involved parties began to
consider the technology’s potential applications for space travel.
Jim McKnight, the executive director
of Gulf County Economic Coalition, said that the project’s aims align
with a growing aerospace industry in the area.
“The expansion of the current
Skyborne Technology’s airship design to include near space opportunities
aligns with the region’s blossoming aerospace industry that is home to
two air force bases and a myriad of new development companies,” he said.
“The location of their facilities near the college training programs
and a stone's throw from an Eglin Air Force base down range site
designated as a launch facility provide for some interesting
possibilities.”