Why Jeff Bezos wants a space station
It’s going to be called Orbital Reef: a private space station for businesses and space tourists. And it’s the brainchild of Amazon’s Jeff Bezos.
It’s no secret that Bezos is a massive space geek, with his Blue Origin rocket company a major player in the new space race alongside Elon Musk’s SpaceX. His current look even has more than a hint of Jean-Luc Picard about it. Still, people don’t always realise he’s long been more interested in building new space habitats than in rockets, as this Atlantic piece explains:
Over the years, Bezos has made himself inaccessible to journalists asking questions about Amazon. But he shares his faith in space colonization with a preacher’s zeal: “We have to go to space to save Earth.”
At the heart of this faith is a text Bezos read as a teen. In 1976, a Princeton physicist named Gerard K. O’Neill wrote a populist case for moving into space called The High Frontier, a book beloved by sci-fi geeks, NASA functionaries, and aging hippies. As a Princeton student, Bezos attended O’Neill seminars and ran the campus chapter of Students for the Exploration and Development of Space. Through Blue Origin, Bezos is developing detailed plans for realizing O’Neill’s vision.
The professor imagined colonies housed in miles-long cylindrical tubes floating between Earth and the moon. The tubes would sustain a simulacrum of life back on the mother planet, with soil, oxygenated air, free-flying birds, and “beaches lapped by waves.” When Bezos describes these colonies—and presents artists’ renderings of them—he sounds almost rapturous. “This is Maui on its best day, all year long. No rain, no storms, no earthquakes.” Since the colonies would allow the human population to grow without any earthly constraints, the species would flourish like never before: “We can have a trillion humans in the solar system, which means we’d have a thousand Mozarts and a thousand Einsteins. This would be an incredible civilization.”
Also see the 1978 video Libra, which imagines a libertarian utopia in space.
It’s going to be called Orbital Reef: a private space station for businesses and space tourists. And it’s the brainchild of Amazon’s Jeff Bezos.
It’s no secret that Bezos is a massive space geek, with his Blue Origin rocket company a major player in the new space race alongside Elon Musk’s SpaceX. His current look even has more than a hint of Jean-Luc Picard about it. Still, people don’t always realise he’s long been more interested in building new space habitats than in rockets, as this Atlantic piece explains:
Over the years, Bezos has made himself inaccessible to journalists asking questions about Amazon. But he shares his faith in space colonization with a preacher’s zeal: “We have to go to space to save Earth.”
At the heart of this faith is a text Bezos read as a teen. In 1976, a Princeton physicist named Gerard K. O’Neill wrote a populist case for moving into space called The High Frontier, a book beloved by sci-fi geeks, NASA functionaries, and aging hippies. As a Princeton student, Bezos attended O’Neill seminars and ran the campus chapter of Students for the Exploration and Development of Space. Through Blue Origin, Bezos is developing detailed plans for realizing O’Neill’s vision.
The professor imagined colonies housed in miles-long cylindrical tubes floating between Earth and the moon. The tubes would sustain a simulacrum of life back on the mother planet, with soil, oxygenated air, free-flying birds, and “beaches lapped by waves.” When Bezos describes these colonies—and presents artists’ renderings of them—he sounds almost rapturous. “This is Maui on its best day, all year long. No rain, no storms, no earthquakes.” Since the colonies would allow the human population to grow without any earthly constraints, the species would flourish like never before: “We can have a trillion humans in the solar system, which means we’d have a thousand Mozarts and a thousand Einsteins. This would be an incredible civilization.”
Also see the 1978 video Libra, which imagines a libertarian utopia in space.