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Spaceport
America

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From
www.spaceportamerica.com
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Spaceport
America (formerly named Southwest Regional Spaceport) is a
commercial spaceport currently being developed on 27 square
miles (70 km?) of state-owned desert near Upham, an
uninhabited place in Sierra County, New Mexico. The site is
45 miles (72 km) north of Las Cruces, and 30 miles (48 km)
east of Truth or Consequences, near the perimeter of the
White Sands Missile Range. According to an Associated Press
report, it currently consists of "a 100-foot (30 m) by
25-foot (7.6 m) concrete slab." Three suborbital rocket
launches from the site have been reported. |
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December, 2005--
Governor Bill Richardson and Sir Richard Branson
announce New Mexico will be Virgin Galactic's world
headquarters. |
Origins
The creation of Spaceport America was the result of a long term
effort by many dedicated individuals to bring orbital launch and
recovery operations and infrastructure to southern New Mexico. The
initial spaceport concept was suggested in 1990 by Dr. Burton Lee
(Stanford University), who proposed the creation of a land recovery
facility for commercial and government orbital re-entry capsules.
Lee authored the initial business and strategic plans, secured seed
funding in the amount of $1.4 million through a congressional
earmark with the assistance of Sen. Pete Domenici, and worked
closely with Bernie McCune and Len Sugerman of the NMSU Physical
Science Laboratory (PSL) to develop local support for the spaceport
concept. The non-profit group Southwest Regional Space Task Force
was created in 1992 by Dr. Ave Tombes, VP for Research and Economic
Development at NMSU, in response to these successful efforts to
obtain congressional and local support for the initiative. The
Taskforce served as a vehicle for coordinating local and statewide
efforts to promote the Southwest Regional Spaceport (SWRS), as it
was originally designated, including ties with federal organizations
such as White Sands Missile Range (WSMR). During the 1993-1994
timeframe, the spaceport concept morphed to focus on launch-to-orbit
facilities and operations, initially intended to support the
NASA/Lockheed VentureStar single-stage-to-orbit program.
The SWRS was renamed Spaceport America in 2006 after Governor Bill
Richardson and Secy. Rick Homans adopted the spaceport initiative as
a formal state of New Mexico economic development program, with
Virgin Galactic slated to be the first anchor tenant. Spaceport
co-founders since 1990 include Lou Gomez, Bill Gutman, Rick Homans,
Burton Lee, Bernie McCune, Gov. Bill Richardson, Hanson Scott, Len
Sugerman, and Lonnie Sumpter, among others (see below for a link to
the Official Spaceport America History presentation, as of October
2007).
Spaceport America is intended to be the first built-from-scratch
commercial spaceport in the United States of America. The $225
million venture was announced in mid-December 2005 in Santa Fe.
Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic plans to launch its first flight
from the spaceport in 2009. Virgin has already collected its
$200,000 per-person fee from the first 100 passengers. Once
completed, Spaceport America is expected to be the venue for the
annual X Prize Cup suborbital spaceflight competitions.

Funding and
construction
It was reported on April 4, 2006 that construction at the spaceport
site had started. On April 3, 2007 voters in neighboring Do?a Ana
County approved a spaceport tax referendum, which passed by only 270
out of nearly 18,000 votes cast. Although collection of the tax was
set to begin in January 2008, in order for collection of the tax to
begin, a spaceport district had to be created, which required that
the tax be approved and collected in at least two counties. Since as
of January 2008 only voters in Dona Ana county had approved the tax,
collection of the tax was placed on hold by New Mexico's attorney
general.
On April 22, 2008, voters in Sierra County, the actual home of the
proposed spaceport, approved the collection of the Spaceport Tax in
their county, thus finally enabling the creation of a spaceport tax
district and freeing the disposition of over $40 million in funding.
The first images of what the new spaceport terminal will look like
were released in early September 2007. The new spaceport has been
designed by Foster + Partners, with construction advice being given
by the URS Corporation. Construction is expected to begin in 2008
and completed by 2010.
Launches
The first launch from the site was the unsuccessful maiden flight of
the SpaceLoft XL rocket. On September 25, 2006 the rocket, launched
by Connecticut firm UP Aerospace, veered off course shortly after
lift-off. The rocket went into a tail spin and did not reach space,
instead crashing into a desolate portion of the White Sands Missile
Range. A second Spaceloft XL was successfully launched April 28,
2007. The primary payload of the second launch was cremated human
remains, including those of astronaut Gordon Cooper and Star Trek
actor James Doohan.
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