
ISS is in Big Trouble! SpaceX Shocked the Whole Industry to launch Starship's space station.
"ISS in Big Trouble! SpaceX found Genius Way to Build Gravity Space Station Shocked China & Russia
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#techmap #techmaps #elonmusk #starshipspacex
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Intro 0:00
The business of commercial space stations 0:45
SpaceX: The most concerning thing 3:36
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1) SOURCES OF THUMBNAIL:
2) SOURCES OF VIDEO AND IMAGES:
SpaceXvision: https://www.youtube.com/c/SpaceXvision
Erc X: https://twitter.com/ErcXspace
ErcX Space https://www.youtube.com/c/ErcXSpace/
SLS (Space Launch System): https://x.com/ScottLikedSLS
DeepSpaceCourier
https://www.youtube.com/@deepspacecourier/videos
Dali Yu
https://www.youtube.com/@dali-yu
Ryan Hansen Space: https://twitter.com/RyanHansenSpace/
https://www.youtube.com/c/RyanHansenSpace
WAI: https://www.youtube.com/@Whataboutit
https://twitter.com/FelixSchlang
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ISS in Big Trouble! SpaceX found Genius Way to Build Gravity Space Station Shocked China & Russia
What if the future of space isn’t about rockets going up… but people staying up?
While companies are fighting to build the first private space stations, SpaceX might already hold the winning card — and they haven’t even announced it yet.
Because the truth is, Elon Musk’s Starship could solve what other space companies call impossible.
And the craziest part? SpaceX may already be shaping that market right now, without anyone realizing it.
In today's Techmap episode, we’re diving into how Starship might quietly become the world’s first next-generation space station — and how SpaceX is already training the world to use it.
ISS in Big Trouble! SpaceX found Genius Way to Build Gravity Space Station Shocked China & Russia
So, why should SpaceX jump into the business of commercial space stations? Let’s break it down.
Right now, Nasa spends over $3 billion a year just to keep the International Space Station running. But here’s the thing — private companies could do the same job for a fraction of that, somewhere between one to two billion annually. That would free up nearly $1.8 billion for nasa to rent lab space from private operators instead. In other words, astronauts stay in orbit, science keeps happening, and a whole new commercial space economy gets the boost it needs.
And that economy? It’s on track to explode — possibly hitting $1.8 trillion by 2035. Why? Because space is no longer just for astronauts. It’s becoming the next big business frontier — think space tourism, orbital research, biomanufacturing, and even movie production in zero gravity. Space tourism alone is growing by more than 25% a year and could pull in over $3 billion annually by the early 2030s.
ISS in Big Trouble! SpaceX found Genius Way to Build Gravity Space Station Shocked China & Russia
Now, several companies are already racing to take the lead. You’ve got Voyager Space with its Starlab project, Axiom Space, Vast, and of course, Blue Origin. What’s driving all this momentum? A few key breakthroughs — reusable rockets that slash launch costs, massive low-Earth orbit satellite networks, and billions in private investment from major players like Janus Henderson. Together, these forces are creating a self-sustaining space economy where humans won’t just visit orbit — they’ll live and work there.
But let’s be real — it’s not all smooth sailing.
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