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  • Hello, I'm Deborah Wang. The Seattle area is home to hundreds of tech companies

  • and some are looking far beyond tech and into space.

  • Not that long ago, only nations had space programs. Now tech billionaires are

  • building rockets, hauling cargo and satellites and offering space travel.

  • Seattle is a launch pad for this effort. Producer Stacy Jenkins considers whether it's

  • a viable commercial industry or just science fiction.

  • JENKINS: Jeff Bezos. Paul Allen. Elon Musk. These billionaire moguls all have ties to Seattle and big dreams of

  • revamping the space industry.

  • Amazon's Jeff Bezos owns Blue Origin Space Company, and plans to launch

  • rockets into orbit by the end of the decade. Stratolaunch Systems, a space

  • airlaunch company is backed by Paul Allen, and Elon Musk recently completed an

  • engineering complex in Redmond with plans to build a constellation of

  • satellites. But beyond the glitter of the billionaire space race, Seattle has

  • quietly held its own as a space hub and it's on a steep growth trajectory.

  • HOYT: At Tethers Unlimited a lot of us are real science fiction fans and what we like to

  • do is kinda take the ideas that are in the science fiction domain and figure out

  • how to drag them into the domain of science reality. JENKINS: Tethers Unlimited in

  • Bothell, WA has been creating and manufacturing space related equipment

  • for over two decades.

  • HOYT: Right now we're working with NASA to develop this recycling system for the

  • space station. Astronauts will be able to take the plastic waste on the space

  • station, they can put the plastic waste into the hopper here and then the

  • machine will melt it down and extrude it to make very high quality filament for

  • the 3D printers that are on the space station. JENKINS: Those 3D printers can then go on

  • to build new pieces of equipment in space. Tethers' in-space manufacturing

  • technology helps save waste and saves money. HOYT: On a typical cargo resupply

  • mission to the space station there's something like 25 pounds of plastic

  • waste that's sent up. Normally they would have to stuff that in a return vehicle and

  • burn it up in the atmosphere to get rid of it, but that mass on orbit is worth

  • about $10,000 per pound, so that's almost a quarter million dollars worth of just

  • raw material that we can recycle into feedstock for building new space systems.

  • UPTAGRAFFT: If we look at 3D or

  • additive manufacturing 10 years ago, 20 years ago, that was all sci-fi stuff.

  • JENKINS: Bob Uptagrafft from the Northwest Aerospace Alliance says the lightspeed

  • advancements in technology combined with its aerospace roots is what makes

  • Seattle a perfect space hub. UPTAGRAFFT: We look at at local companies like Rocketdyne

  • as an example, used to be called Rocket Research, they have for the last 30

  • years been producing booster jet rockets that drive satellites to space.

  • JENKINS: Aerojet Rocketdyne was the first space company to set up shop in Washington State.

  • It recently played a key role in the historic fly-by of Pluto with NASA's new

  • Horizon spacecraft. FELIX: We had 16 rockets, 16 different thruster engines. It

  • works like a baby grand piano that's mounted in as part of the spacecraft

  • aperture. The satellite itself is powered by 100% pure Aerojet Rocketdyne Redmond power.

  • Aerojet Rocketdyne continues to report positive growth. There are also a number of new

  • players on the field including Planetary Resources, whose mission is to mine

  • asteroids; and Spaceflight in Tukwila, who focus on small satellite launches. All this

  • growth is also attracting talent. MUHLBAUER: A lot of people I know have moved to the Pacific

  • Northwest. I actually have a group of friends who came out here that are all

  • from Georgia. JENKINS: Dr Rachel Muhlbauer moved here about a year ago to work at Tethers

  • Unlimited. MUHLBAUER: Especially in the Seattle area there's just been the boom for the space

  • industry. JENKINS: With no end to this growth in sight, it seems that the possibilities

  • for space in Seattle are infinite. FELIX: We're a very proud space community that's at the

  • beginning of the forefront, right, space is big and vast and there's plenty of

  • room for us all to maneuver and it's

  • really a function of how we work together with the same common cause

  • which is exploration.

  • IN Close on KCTS 9 is made possible in part by BECU. You can join our

  • conversation about the Seattle space race by going to KCTS9.org/in-close

Hello, I'm Deborah Wang. The Seattle area is home to hundreds of tech companies

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