Russia Wants to Build a New Space Station from the ISS’s Bones

Why let a couple good rooms burn up in the atmosphere?

byWill Sabel Courtney|
Russia Wants to Build a New Space Station from the ISS’s Bones
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When the International Space Station reaches the end of its operation life sometime in the 2020s, the current plan is for it to be dropped in a meteoric descent down towards a unpopulated chunk of the South Pacific. But all that could go out the window if Russia's main contractor for space travel has its way.

According to a report from the publisher of RussianSpaceWeb.com, space contractor RKK Energia wants to separate the Russian multi-purpose module known as "Nauka" from the ISS in advance of the multi-national orbital outpost's terminal descent, then use it—and the two Russian-made modules scheduled to be added to it in the near future—as the foundation for a new space station with a big "Russians Only!" sign painted on the airlock.

It may seem odd at first glance, but salvaging the modules makes a fair amount of sense from the Russian perspective. While Nauru has been planned for years, a series of delays means it's unlikely to take off before 2017 at the earliest, meaning all those billions of rubles would have been spent on a perfectly good space habitat that's scheduled to burn up in the atmosphere after less than a decade.

The three-segment station wouldn't be nearly as impressive as the ISS, but it wouldn't be an orbital walk-in closet, either. The Nauka module alone weighs 20 tons (at least, on Earth); the science module that will be added soon includes a modern laboratory and solar panels, while the upcoming Node Module can link up to six total station segments together. Pop on an inflatable room, add on a Soyuz capsule for quick exits, and boom—you've got Mir II: Mir Harder.

Of course, that's assuming this plan becomes a reality. So far, it hasn't been endorsed by the Russian government. But considering Vladimir Putin probably doesn't want to abandon the final frontier to America and Elon Musk, RKK Energia's plan seems like a decent way for the nation to keep its space dreams afloat.

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