Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. Legacy Archives

SpaceX just got the green light to build its own spaceport in Texas

Add as a preferred source on Google

Earlier this week, SpaceX (aka Elon Musk’s other company) was granted approval from the Federal Aviation Administration to build a 56.5-acre spaceport along the Gulf of Mexico. While the company will still need approvals from local agencies before it can begin construction, the FAA’s decision is a monumental step forward on the path to making the long-planned spaceport a reality. This is major win for SpaceX, since the proposed spaceport will allow the company to launch from private property, rather than from Air Force facilities it currently uses  for rocket tests and missions to the International Space Station.

On Wednesday, the FAA, which oversees all commercial space launches in the US, issued SpaceX what’s known as a Record of Decision that states the agency will grant launch licenses to the company to operate at a private location along the Texas-Mexico border near Boca Chico State Park — about 20 miles east of Brownsville, Texas. Under the FAA decision, SpaceX may conduct 12 commercial launches per year through 2025, specifically ten Falcon 9 rockets and two Falcon Heavy rockets.

Recommended Videos

This definitely isn’t the last hurdle that SpaceX needs to overcome before it can start building (it still needs approval from various state agencies in order to build roads start construction on the site), but this should be the last federal obstacle the company will face before it breaks ground on the spaceport.

Drew Prindle
Former Senior Editor, Features
Drew Prindle is an award-winning writer, editor, and storyteller who currently serves as Senior Features Editor for Digital…
Blue Origin’s massive New Glenn rocket explodes in a fiery blaze during tests
The incident leaves NASA's Moon Base ambitions and Amazon's Kuiper constellation without their primary launch vehicle at the worst possible moment.
Explosion, Fire, Nuclear Explosion

Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket exploded during a static fire test at Launch Complex 36 in Cape Canaveral, Florida. The incident took place on the night of May 28, 2026. 

The explosion was captured on a live stream by NASASpaceflight.com and footage of the explosion spread rapidly across X. The Space Launch Complex 45 has confirmed in an official statement (shared by Spaceflight Now on X) that all personnel have been accounted for and there have been no injuries or fatalities.

Read more
Orbot Robotics’ space robot has four arms, but its Goro physique has a purpose
This four-armed robot could make routine space-station work easier for astronauts
Robot with four arms

Helios is a new four-armed robot from Zurich-based Orbit Robotics, and at first glance, it reminded me of Goro from Mortal Kombat. But unlike the prince from Outworld, Helios is not built for combat. It is designed to help astronauts on space stations with the repetitive, time-consuming work that keeps life in space running.

Orbit Robotics says that in microgravity, legs are not much help. Instead of walking or standing, Helios needs to move through tight station interiors, hold itself steady, and handle cargo, tools, or equipment. Its four-arm design turns extra limbs into both mobility aids and working hands.

Read more
A billionaire crypto bro will lead humanity to Mars atop Musk’s Starship
Chun Wang could become one of the first humans to travel toward Mars
Chun Wang in a space suit

Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the faces of the Moon landing era. Elon Musk’s Mars era may get a very different public face in Chun Wang, a cryptocurrency billionaire whose fortune traces back to Bitcoin mining.

Wang is expected to lead a future SpaceX Starship mission that would fly past Mars and return to Earth. SpaceX has not announced a launch date, and the plan still depends on Starship proving it can safely carry humans far beyond Earth's orbit.

Read more