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Bezos builds out space venture near Space Needle

Jon Skillings Editorial director
Jon Skillings is an editorial director at CNET, where he's worked since 2000. A born browser of dictionaries, he honed his language skills as a US Army linguist (Polish and German) before diving into editing for tech publications -- including at PC Week and the IDG News Service -- back when the web was just getting under way, and even a little before. For CNET, he's written on topics from GPS, AI and 5G to James Bond, aircraft, astronauts, brass instruments and music streaming services.
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  • 30 years experience at tech and consumer publications, print and online. Five years in the US Army as a translator (German and Polish).
Jon Skillings

The focus of attention on Blue Origin, the secretive space colonization initiative backed by Amazon.com's Jeff Bezos, has shifted from Texas to the Pacific Northwest.

The Seattle Times is reporting that documents filed with the city of Kent, Wash. and with the Federal Aviation Administration show Blue Origin is revamping a 243,000-square-foot office and warehouse to accommodate rocket assembly equipment and a staff that will grow from 40 people currently to as many as 100 over the next several years. The low-profile, high-altitude start-up is expected to move into its new quarters in the first quarter of 2006.

Costs for the Kent expansion are approximately $21 million, according to the Seattle Times story--$13 million for 25 acres of industrial land, and $8 million for remodeling of the structures. Amazon, the e-commerce company Bezos founded a decade ago, is based in nearby Seattle--also the home, probably coincidentally, of the famed Space Needle tower.

Bezos revealed earlier in the year that testing of the rocketships will take place in an out-of-the-way part of west Texas. Blue Origin's are expected to be reusable, vertical-launch suborbital craft controlled by on-board computers.