WASHINGTON — Gravitics, a startup developing modules for commercial space stations, will use its technologies for tactically responsive space applications for the U.S. Space Force.
The company announced April 25 it won a $1.7 million Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) contract from SpaceWERX, the innovation arm of the Space Force. The contract, a “direct to phase 2” SBIR award, is in partnership with Space Systems Command’s Space Safari Program Office.
Gravitics, based near Seattle, is developing modules for use on future commercial space stations. One concept, called StarMax, is a cylindrical module with an aluminum full 7.6 meters in diameter and offers 400 cubic meters of volume, about 40% of the volume of the entire International Space Station.
The company said it will apply those technologies for tactically responsive space, or TacRS, applications. “Gravitics’ commercial space station modules can support a wide range of military and civilian applications, including in-space rapid response applications,” the company said in a statement about the SBIR award.
“We are looking at all options to meet the mission on tactically relevant timelines. The Gravitics space station module offers an unconventional and potentially game-changing solution for TacRS,” said Lt. Col. Jason Altenhofen, director of operations for Space Safari, a part of Space Systems Command leading work on tactically responsive space applications, in the statement.
The company did not elaborate on the specific work it will be doing under the SBIR or how its module technologies would be used for tactically responsive space. A source familiar with the effort said that the award covered work on architectures, requirements and initial hardware development.
SpaceWERX organized a TacRS Space Challenge last year to seek concepts from industry in space and ground systems to support tactically responsive space. Altenhofen said last fall that the…
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