Is This A Good Idea? A Lunar Hotel?
October 19, 2009
If you watched one of my favorite TV dramas, Mad Men, the other night, you may have been intriguedor puzzledover the fictionalized version of hotelier Conrad Hilton’s insistence that an ad campaign include his fantasy of building a hotel on the moon. Indeed, the script writers were using a bit of creative license. In real life, it actually was Barron Hilton, Conrad’s son and successor as company president, who publicly brought up the idea in a 1967 speech at a space conference.
I firmly believe that we are going to have Hiltons in outer space, perhaps even soon enough for me to officiate at the formal opening of the first. If the world powers continue to restrict outer space to peaceful pursuits, there will be travelers in outer spaceand where there are travelers there must be Hiltons.
This was no idle fantasy. Barron Hilton said that he had consulted researchers at Cornell University, who actually had written a feasibility study on the project, and went on to describe his moon hotel in more detail:
Entrance to the Lunar Hilton will be on the surface of the moon, but most of the Hilton will be situated beneath the surfacesay 20 to 30 feetto establish constant temperature controls and a more workable hotel area. The experiments of Surveyor Three seem to indicate that excavations on the moon are possible and that the moon soil might be used for construction.
The Hilton will have three levels. At the bottom mechanical equipment will be housed. The center level will consist of two 400-foot guest corridors crossing in the middle core. These corridors will contain 100 guest rooms. The top level will be used for public space. Off the dining room we will place necessary machines and storage areas. The various sections will be lined with plastic which can expand under air pressure. Each section will be separated from the others by air locks. Thus, should leaks develope [sic? is it spelled that way in original?] in these pressurized cells they can be repaired as an automobile tire is repaired here on earth. The Cornell boys assure us that "leaks that develop in the system will be a nuisance rather than a disaster".
To start with we will have only three floors, which will eliminate elevators and minimize power requirements. The multi-storied underground hotel will come later. Butand this is very importantin almost every respect the Lunar Hilton will be physically like an earth Hilton.
We know that most guests are uneasy unless their accommodations are a reflection of their style of living. We will have none of those science-fiction "cells". The rooms will be large, with carpets and drapes and plants; the artificial lighting will reflect the sunlight. There will be wall-to-wall television for programs from earth and for views of outer space.
Barron Hilton also reassured future lunar visitors that they would be able to dine upon cuisine similar to what they could order from room service back on Earth. He envisioned freeze-drying steaks and reducing them to the size of silver dollars for shipment to the moon, where they would be reconstituted in the hotel’s nuclear-powered kitchen to be as “tasty and nourishing” as the fresh kind, and an automated bar that would serve martinis reconstituted from pills. He even anticipated that guests would be able to use their Carte Blanche credit cards on the moon.
Barron Hilton’s vision for a lunar hotel has yet to come to pass, but the idea hasn’t gone away. In the late 1990s, British architect Peter Inston actually drew up a plan for a 5,000-room domed, solar-powered lunar structure, reportedly at the hotel chain’s request. (Some of the conceptual drawings are reproduced in this report for a 2002 conference on space architecture.) A few years later, in 2001, Dutch architect Hans-Jurgen Rombaut designed a twin-towered lunar hotel that could accommodate 200 guests. New Scientist reported some of the more exotic flourishes:
Rombaut's hotel is a far cry from your average establishmentin fact, he prefers to call it a "sensation engine". The hotel's two slanting towers, each 160 metres high, will provide tourists space to indulge in "low-gravity games" such as indoor mountaineering, abseiling and "flying" using special suits with bat-like wings.Suspended from the Moon-rock backbones of the towers will be teardrop-shaped "habitation capsules" designed to look like small spaceships, so that guests will feel as if they're still travelling, says Rombaut. Each capsule will have its own supply of fresh water and a rubbish and sewage disposal unit that will be changed every day by the hotel staff.
You’d think that building a lunar hotel might have trouble attracting business, considering that the locale hasn’t had any visitors in the past 37 years. But with NASA now planning to return to the moon in 2019 and establish a permanent human presence there, I suspect that private-sector commercial activity won’t be that far behind. The moon could well turn into the Saudi Arabia of the 21st-century energy industry. Lunar soil is a potentially rich source of helium-3, a substance found abundantly in lunar soil that someday could fuel fusion reactors to provide most of the Earth’s energy needs; moon-based plants that would collect solar energy and transmit it to Earth might turn into another lucrative venture. And if private space travel becomes a viable industry, historic sites on the moon might turn into a major draw for tourists.
On the downside, it’s hard to come up with a meaningful estimate of just how much it might cost to build a lunar hotel, but the expense is likely to be astronomical. (Sorry, I couldn’t resist.) On the other hand, there don’t seem to be any shortage of software moguls clamoring to pay $20 million for rides on Russian spaceflights, so no matter how pricey the accommodations would be, my guess is that there would be plenty of takers. Obtaining a steady supply of clean towels and sheets, and keeping the minibars stocked with tiny bottles of Bombay gin, might be a bit more of a challenge.
So what do you think? Do we need a hotel on the moon? Express your opinion below.







hahahahaah
Posted by: Astroboy | October 20, 2009 at 01:58 PM
Nice! I just hope I'll live long enough to see that happen.
Posted by: TheBearPaw | October 20, 2009 at 04:59 PM
I don't think this is a practical idea.
Posted by: Don Draper | October 20, 2009 at 11:41 PM
Who would invest money in something like this?
Posted by: Realist | October 22, 2009 at 01:03 PM
i think this is a wonderful idea, i just hope i'm still alive when it is affordable...
Posted by: Phillip | October 22, 2009 at 06:25 PM
Affordability is likely the least probable aspect, although a more broad spectrum and global representation of such presences at antartica would likely be plausible as multiple habitats would diminish overall humanoid viabilty relative to available resources...it will simply be a pre-requisite that co-operative interaction be the norm...that cannot help but make for a better example or experiment as may be for differing terran cultures to pursue more interdependant and beneficial methods of co-existence, imo
Posted by: Eveonline | October 23, 2009 at 10:53 PM
wow, i think it is impossible to make twin towers on the moon or even how will they get all these "travelers" to the moon. Astronaouts(sorry on the spelling) go threw intense training to go to outer space. now there just going to send random people up there to spend the weekend. why do we need a hotel up there any way? people are so rich and aragent that they want and want and want. Will this effect anything w/ our tides or anything? hilton >:/ (mad smilie)
Posted by: Sarah | October 24, 2009 at 12:27 PM
With a hotel you will need the workers to have residency or to be transported with the guests. With residency comes colonization and with colonization comes the future of humanity. I hope this happens sooner than later.
Posted by: Daniel G. W. | November 25, 2009 at 04:23 AM
We, as humans, can't leave anything alone. We have to ruin it if we can.
Posted by: Jordan | November 25, 2009 at 12:36 PM
I have found so many interesting articles & information on various topics in your blog especially its discussion. I guess I am not the only one having all the enjoyment here! keep up the good work. I like your presentation.
Posted by: Mark | June 15, 2010 at 03:15 AM
You may remenber the four proverbs:
Old sin makes new shame.
Once a man and twice a child.
Once a thief, always a thief.
Once bitten, twice shy.
Posted by: nike air max plus | October 29, 2010 at 10:57 PM
It would be sheer lunacy.
Posted by: Mandar | January 28, 2011 at 02:48 PM
Yes it is a great concept according to me for the to make the lunar hotel . And the description given about the hotel is a nice .
Posted by: Hotel promocao | April 08, 2011 at 02:04 PM
Oh, I would love the conversations that would follow that. So Bob, where did you spend the holidays? Well, you know, we visited our relatives in Florida and checked in the Lunar Hotel for quite a few Earth days. Nothing special really.
Posted by: Apartment in pattaya | February 11, 2012 at 12:18 AM