Japanese Construction Company Plans Space Elevator By 2050
Rebecca Boyle
at 03:29 AM 23 Feb 2012
Comments 0
Obayashi Corp. plans to build a space elevator by 2050. The company is days away from completing this structure, the Tokyo Sky Tree, which will be Japan's tallest building at 2,080 feet high.
Obayashi Corp. plans to build a space elevator by 2050. The company is days away from completing this structure, the Tokyo Sky Tree, which will be Japan's tallest building at 2,080 feet high.
IMAGE BY Syuzo Tsushima, flickr.com/people/tsushima2011/, Creative Commons
Technology // 

Space elevators have been our shared dream for years, but like other promising technologies of the future, they're just concepts on a distant horizon. Now a Japanese construction firm that specialises in the very tall could make them a reality. By 2050, so still pretty far on that horizon, but hey, it's a start.

Obayashi Corp., which is almost done building the giant structure above, the Tokyo Sky Tree, wants to build a space elevator that would reach 36,000 km above the Earth - that's above the altitude where geosynchronous satellites orbit. It would take a week to ride up the elevator, traveling on some type of vessel tethered to carbon nanotube cables.

In Obayashi's plan, a carbon nanotube cable would stretch one-quarter of the way from the Earth to the moon, about 96,000 km and attach to some type of spaceborne counterweight. The other end of the tether would be anchored at an Earth-based spaceport, as reported by the Japanese newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun.

The elevator car could carry up to 30 people and would travel at 200 kph for a week. Tourists could stay at the waystation at 36,000 km up, and scientists and researchers could go all the way to the end of the tether. There are unfortunately no leads on cost, where to build it or who would finance the project, however.

AFP reports that the company was inspired by its work on the Sky Tree, a 634-metre tower that will contain telecommunications antennas and a visitor's deck offering panoramic views of the capital. "Our experts on construction, climate, wind patterns, design, they say it's possible," spokeswoman Satomi Katsuyama told AFP. In 40 years, maybe so.

[Yomiuri Shimbun via Slashdot]

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