Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Building commercial space stations. Haven Demo flew 3 months in orbit (2025-2026). Haven-1 crew launch May 2026. $500M raised (Mar 2026). Founded 2021 by Jed McCaleb.
Vast is a commercial space station company founded in 2021 by Jed McCaleb, the entrepreneur behind Ripple and Stellar, with a mission to build privately owned and operated habitats in low Earth orbit. As NASA's International Space Station approaches decommissioning, Vast is positioned to provide a successor commercial destination for astronauts, researchers, and private space travelers. The company is building a family of modular space stations designed to serve as research platforms, manufacturing facilities, and eventually long-duration human habitation in orbit — the next phase of human spaceflight infrastructure.\n\nVast's initial product is Haven-1, a single-module commercial space station designed for short-duration crew missions. Haven-1 is scheduled for a crewed launch in May 2026 aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon, making it the first commercial space station to host astronauts. A demonstration version of the Haven module completed a three-month uncrewed orbital mission between 2025 and 2026, validating the platform's life support, power, and structural systems in orbit. Vast is also developing Haven-2, a larger multi-module station intended for longer-duration research and commercial operations.\n\nVast raised $500M in March 2026, bringing total capitalization to over $500M and enabling the company to accelerate station development and expand its mission manifest. The company has partnered with SpaceX for launch and crew transportation services. Vast is competing with Axiom Space and Blue Origin's Orbital Reef project for the commercial space station market, which NASA is funding through its Commercial Low Earth Orbit Destinations (CLD) program as a deliberate strategy to transition human spaceflight from government-owned to commercially operated infrastructure.
Astranis is building the world's smallest geostationary communication satellites, providing dedicated broadband connectivity to underserved countries and island regions. HQ: San Francisco.
Astranis is a satellite internet company building the world's smallest geostationary (GEO) communication satellites — roughly the size of a washing machine at ~400kg, compared to traditional telecom satellites weighing 6,000kg+. Founded in 2015 by John Gedmark and Ryan McLinko, Astranis has developed a miniaturized satellite platform that dramatically reduces the cost and lead time of deploying dedicated broadband capacity to underserved regions. Its satellites are designed to provide dedicated broadband capacity — not shared like LEO constellation services (Starlink) — to island nations, remote regions, and underserved countries that lack terrestrial broadband infrastructure.
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