1. Headline
  1. Headline
The Golden Spike Co.
The Golden Spike Co. intends to be the first company planning to offer routine exploration expeditions to the surface of the moon.
By
updated 1/3/2013 6:57:07 PM ET 2013-01-03T23:57:07

The new moon travel startup Golden Spike has chosen its first contractor to design private lunar lander vehicles: veteran aerospace firm Northrop Grumman.

Northrop Grumman built the very first manned lunar landers back in the 1960s (when the company was called Grumman) for NASA's Apollo program. The firm made the Eagle module that carried Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to the lunar surface for the first manned moon landing in 1969.

Now the company will design a vehicle to help Golden Spike achieve its goal of establishing routine commercial transportation of people to the moon and back by the end of the decade.

"This is a significant step forward in our plans," Gerry Griffin, Golden Spike's board chairman, said in a statement. "Northrop Grumman brings Golden Spike a unique body of knowledge and skills as the only company to ever build a successful human-rated lunar lander, the Apollo Lunar Module."

The founding of Golden Spike (named after the final spike built into the First Transcontinental Railroad), was announced just last month, though the project has been secretly in the works for two and a half years. [ Graphic: How Golden Spike's Moon Landing Plan Works ]

The startup hopes to sell round-trip moon expeditions to foreign countries, research organizations and even some wealthy individuals. Company market studies suggest Golden Spike could sell and carry out 15 to 25 of these trips within 10 years, once it gets going. Each expedition will carry a price tag of roughly $1.5 billion, company officials have said.

To launch these journeys, Golden Spike officials say existing rockets and spacecraft already built or under development can be enlisted. The only major hardware element that must be designed and constructed from the ground up is the lunar lander.

Northrop Grumman will explore a variety of different lunar lander concepts, looking for the best combination of reliability, affordability and operability, officials said.

"We're very proud to be working with Northrop Grumman, which has the most experience and successful performance record for human lunar lander designs in the world," said planetary scientist Alan Stern, Golden Spike's president and chief executive officer.

  1. Space news from NBCNews.com
    1. Teen's space mission fueled by social media
      KARE

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: "Astronaut Abby" is at the controls of a social-media machine that is launching the 15-y...

    2. Buzz Aldrin's vision for journey to Mars
    3. Giant black hole may be cooking up meals
    4. Watch a 'ring of fire' solar eclipse online

For now, Northrop Grumman has been hired to design the lunar lander, but whether or not the same firm will construct it remains to be seen.

"This study is one of a number of initial studies we're undertaking to begin creating the design requirements and specs for the lander contract competition we expect to hold to select a Golden Spike lander for flight development," said James R. French, Golden Spike's Lunar Lander Systems Study (LLaSS) engineering chief.

Follow Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook  and  Google+.

© 2013 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Discuss:

Discussion comments

,

Most active discussions

  1. votes comments
  2. votes comments
  3. votes comments
  4. votes comments

More on TODAY.com

None
  1. ‘Sopranos’ star Gandolfini dead; son called for help

    James Gandolfini, who rose to fame on “The Sopranos," died Wednesday.

    6/20/2013 9:40:49 AM +00:00 2013-06-20T09:40:49
  2. Dexter to Draper: How Soprano paved the way

    Gandolfini's appealing portrayal of a gritty, unappealing guy ushered in the era of the modern TV antihero.

    6/20/2013 2:14:03 AM +00:00 2013-06-20T02:14:03
  3. Gandolfini’s range, from mobster to CIA boss

    James Gandolfini, who died June 19 at the age of 51, reinvented the television antihero with his iconic portrayal of Tony Soprano, but he was also acclaimed for his extraordinary resume as a character actor.

    6/20/2013 1:47:02 AM +00:00 2013-06-20T01:47:02
  4. Soprano, Gandolfini had NJ state of mind

    The incredible success of New Jersey native James Gandolfini and "The Sopranos" changed the Garden State forever.

    6/20/2013 2:51:37 AM +00:00 2013-06-20T02:51:37
  5. Barry Wetcher / AP file
None
  1. US nuke-reduction goal just the start of slow process

    President Obama says he wants to reduce the number of deployed U.S. nuclear weapons by a third, but even if the Russians agree to do the same, it could be a decade or longer before the warheads under discussion are actually destroyed.

    6/20/2013 8:04:39 AM +00:00 2013-06-20T08:04:39
None
  1. Marc Shoul / Panos for NBC News

    All-white town spurns Mandela's 'Rainbow Nation'

    6/20/2013 8:59:14 AM +00:00 2013-06-20T08:59:14
None
  1. What Duchess Kate’s ‘maternity leave’ means

    Officially, the Duchess of Cambridge is off the grid, trying to spend the final weeks of her pregnancy out of a limelight. But unofficially…

    6/19/2013 3:52:49 PM +00:00 2013-06-19T15:52:49
  2. Kate to give birth in same hospital as Princess Diana
  3. slideshow Duchess Kate’s maternity style
  4. Getty Images