
Astroport is taking a giant leap towards future moon infrastructure
Moon colonies got a small step closer this week, thanks to San Antonio company Astroport Space Technologies, which completed an important field test of its new lunar excavator.
Lunar exploration and development are currently hampered by the fact that the moon is largely devoid of necessary infrastructure, like spaceports. Such amenities need to be constructed remotely by autonomous vehicles. Making effective devices that can survive the harsh lunar surface long enough to complete construction projects is daunting.
Enter Astroport and their prototype excavator. Founded in San Antonio in 2020, the company has become a major part of building plans beyond Earth. The new excavator is designed to function with Astrolab's Flexible Logistics and Exploration (FLEX) rover, a highly modular vehicle that will perform a variety of functions on the surface of the moon.
In a recent demo, the prototype excavator successfully integrated with the FLEX and proceeded to dig in a simulated lunar surface. The excavator collected an average of 207 lbs (94kg) of regolith (lunar surface dust) in just 3.5 minutes. It will need that speed to move the estimated 3,723 tons (3,378 tonnes) of regolith needed for a lunar spaceport.
Speaking after the successful test, both Astroport and Astrolab expressed confidence that the excavator was ready for deployment."Leading with this successful excavator demo proves that our technology is no longer theoretical—it is operational," said Sam Ximenes, CEO of Astroport.
"This is the first of many implements in development that will turn Astrolab's FLEX rover into the 'Swiss Army Knife' of lunar construction. To meet the infrastructure needs of the emerging lunar economy, we must build the 'Port' before the 'Ship' arrives. By leveraging the FLEX platform, we are providing the Space Force, NASA, and commercial partners with a 'Shovel-Ready' construction capability to secure the lunar high ground."
"We are excited to provide the mobility backbone for Astroport's groundbreaking construction technology," said Jaret Matthews, CEO of Astrolab, in a release. "Astrolab is dedicated to establishing a viable lunar ecosystem. By combining our FLEX rover's versatility with Astroport's civil engineering expertise, we are delivering the essential capabilities required for a sustainable lunar economy."

The rough terrain of Main Plaza in 2009, before the fountains were removed in 2023.Photo by Grant Laird Jr./ CC BY 2.0