ThereIwas, someone said on your link:<br /><br /><blockquote><font class="small">In reply to:</font><hr /><p>big orbital and moon projects are very interesting... but... <br /><br />ready available rockets (Ariane, Atlas, Delta, ecc.) costs (around) $10M per mT launched to LEO <br /><br />the new Ares' family (including the shared R&D costs) may reach $20-30M per mT to LEO <br /><br />also IF a 20 mT manned capsule or module unit price will fall to $1M its "total price" will still be: <br /><br />20 mT x $10M (Ariane5 pric- per-mT to LEO) = $200M + $1M = $201M <br /><br />so (assuming this very low "$1M" price for a manned 4-seats private capsule) the "price-per-seat" is: <br /><br />$201M / 4 seats = $50.5M per seat... <br /><br />but, since (at least) one of them MUST be a professional pilot, the real price per-passenger is: <br /><br />$201M /3 = $67M per-passenger-seat <br /><br />same problem to launch a space module or an unmanned robot or EVERYTHING you want <br /><br />all space project will always face a "problem" our planet has from 4.5 billion years: "gravity" <br /><br />then, the step/effort #1 of ALL space projects/companies must be: "LOW PRICE PER mT TO LEO" <br /><br />IF companies like SpaceX will (REALLY) succeed in build cheap (but RELIABLE) rockets, all plans may happen <br /><br />while, if they don't succeed (or the price will remains in the EELV/Ares range) they will remain DREAMS <br /><br />so, my suggestion is: LESS time and money "payloads dreams" and MORE money and efforts on "rockets" <br /><p><hr /></p></p></blockquote><br /><br />But I think those dreams are real possibilities and should be developed now. Because despite launch costs, ISS is being built and cheaper heavy-lift rockets <b>will come</b> that will allow cislunar stations/moonbases etc to also be built!