When I read about the Orbital Assembly Corp.'s plans to begin construction on a space hotel in 2026, it didn't occur to me to doubt that it would happen. I just imagined my first step, Neil Armstrong style, onto the jet bridge and felt my heart, legs and stomach all judder in real life. I wondered whether I would be brave enough, given the chance, to take that second step.
This is the perfect cultural moment to dangle the Kennedy-era optimism of a space hotel before a country full of jumpy shut-ins. We're as ready to flee as Andy Dufresne tunneling out of Shawshank State Prison, and, man, do we need an escape.
Since a 3 1/2 day stay on the Voyager Station comes with a $5 million price tag, thinking about it is all many of us will ever do, but it's still fun. It's like when you put 67 things in your Etsy cart and just log off. As Debbie Harry sang, dreaming is free.
"It's inspirational," says hotel industry expert Anthony Melchiorri, co-host of the podcast "Checking in With Anthony and Glenn" and host of the Travel Channel's "Hotel Impossible." "And it's aspirational. You want to go there, you want to do that. And whether it happens or not in a couple of years, it just tells you how important travel is and how important hotels are, especially now."
Space hotels, Melchiorri notes, are an idea that has been orbiting the industry for decades. Hilton "wanted to put a hotel on the moon back in the 1960s, so it's something people have been thinking about and dreaming about for a long time," he says. The idea was even promoted with mock-up keys and promotional reservation forms for the "Lunar Hilton."
There are other space tourism projects in the works, including Virgin Galactic's Spaceship III that is as retro-future glam as "Barbarella," and SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule, with a 360-degree glass viewing dome that looks like the Pop-O-Matic from the board game Trouble. (Orbital Assembly probably will be working with SpaceX to get the hotel done.) Both are slated to carry civilians into the cosmos this year.
"Spaceship" and "capsule," though, do not have the comfortable familiarity of "hotel." That word makes it more desirable for those of us who are less space-savvy. It may look like a giant bike tire, but it will also have elements that we recognize, like maybe a gift shop stocked with special edition Mars and Milky Way bars or shirts that say, "My friend paid $5 million to go to space and all I got was this lousy T-shirt."
With that in mind, I asked experts on travel, hotels and real and imagined space what they would look for in a space hotel. Thankfully, none of them said "atmosphere."