Texas-Based Billionaires Face Off in Private Space Race

VAN HORN, Texas— An isolated edge of vast West Texas is home to a highly secretive part of the 21st-century space race, one of two being directed in the Lone Star State by Internet billionaires whose personalities and corporate strategies seem worlds...
Texas-Based Billionaires Face Off in Private Space Race
Space X's Falcon 9 rocket launches on January 10, 2015 as it heads to space from pad 40 at Cape Canaveral, Florida, carrying the Dragon CRS5 spacecraft on a resupply mission to the International Space Station (ISS). Bruce Weaver/AFP/Getty Images
|Updated:

VAN HORN, Texas—An isolated edge of vast West Texas is home to a highly secretive part of the 21st-century space race, one of two being directed in the Lone Star State by Internet billionaires whose personalities and corporate strategies seem worlds apart.

The presence of Blue Origin LLC, the brainchild of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, barely registers in nearby Van Horn, a way station along Interstate 10, a full decade after he began buying land in one of Texas’s largest and most remote counties.

Few visitors are allowed beyond the “No Trespassing” sign and a remote-controlled gate and into the desert and mountain environment reminiscent of the Air Force’s renowned Area 51 in Nevada. The privileged who do get inside decline to describe what they’ve seen, typically citing confidentiality agreements.

“No one gets in other than employees,” said Robert Morales, editor of the weekly Van Horn Advocate newspaper.

Bezos and Musk have seemingly unlimited resources and lofty aspirations: launching a new era of commercial space operations, in part by cutting costs through reusable rockets.