G-Man
Cleared for Takeoff
Great find, Katamarino. Unfortunately, the Las Vegas Space Port does not yet exist:
From the first article: "Las Vegas commercial real estate developer Rob Lauer envisions a private spaceport on 240 acres in Clark County. On Tuesday [June 20 or 27], he began soliciting investors to raise $310 million to build a launching pad, a runway for spaceplanes, a control tower, a flight school and a 200-room casino resort between Las Vegas and Pahrump. It’s a crowdsourcing effort to build an escrow account that eventually would lead to the formation of a publicly traded company to build Las Vegas Spaceport... Lauer’s timeline is to have the Las Vegas Spaceport licensed within two years enabling a groundbreaking for the runway. He expects the first rockets to be launched within five to seven years with spaceplane use within 10."
The article refers to it as a "ten-year plan."
While I'd love to attend the re-located Reno Air Races in Pahrump next year, that seems somewhat ambitious, at the very least...
The next frontier of tourism: Las Vegas Spaceport proposed west of city
Rob Lauer, a commercial real estate investor, looks to raise $310 million to build a spaceport between Las Vegas and Pahrump within the next decade.
www.reviewjournal.com
Las Vegas Spaceport lands deal to bring it closer to launch
The company that plans to build a spaceport on desert land between Las Vegas and Pahrump has a partnership with an airborne launching company.
www.reviewjournal.com
From the first article: "Las Vegas commercial real estate developer Rob Lauer envisions a private spaceport on 240 acres in Clark County. On Tuesday [June 20 or 27], he began soliciting investors to raise $310 million to build a launching pad, a runway for spaceplanes, a control tower, a flight school and a 200-room casino resort between Las Vegas and Pahrump. It’s a crowdsourcing effort to build an escrow account that eventually would lead to the formation of a publicly traded company to build Las Vegas Spaceport... Lauer’s timeline is to have the Las Vegas Spaceport licensed within two years enabling a groundbreaking for the runway. He expects the first rockets to be launched within five to seven years with spaceplane use within 10."
The article refers to it as a "ten-year plan."
While I'd love to attend the re-located Reno Air Races in Pahrump next year, that seems somewhat ambitious, at the very least...
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