Radian Aerospace Emerges
from Stealth, Announces Seed Funding led by Fine
Structure Ventures
Jan. 19, 2022
Radian Aerospace announced the
company recently closed $27.5 million in seed
funding. The recent round was led by Fine Structure
Ventures, a venture capital fund affiliated with FMR
LLC, the parent company of Fidelity Investments,
with additional investment from EXOR, The Venture
Collective, Helios Capital, SpaceFund, Gaingels, The
Private Shares Fund, Explorer 1 Fund, Type One
Ventures as well as others.
Radian's new approach is
expected to uncork existing aerospace markets and
create entirely new ones.
Radian has operated in stealth
mode focusing on the design and initial development
of a revolutionary aerospace vehicle that will fill
the efficiency and capability gaps that exist with
traditional vertical rockets. With the new
investment, the company is on track to advance the
development of Radian One, the world's first fully
functional horizontal takeoff and landing,
single-stage to orbit vehicle. Radian's system will
be capable of a wide range of space operations
including the delivery of people and light cargo to
low earth orbit (LEO) with aircraft-like operations.
"To date, a low cost space
transport solution has been lacking that can get
humans and cargo to and from space at a highly
responsive rate," said Brett Rome, Venture Partner
at Fine Structure Ventures. "Radian is well
positioned to fill that gap with disruptive
technology that helps enable the emerging space
economy. We are confident in the experienced team at
Radian, and thrilled to be supporting its mission as
Radian works to revolutionize the future of space
access."
Radian is building the first of
a new generation of launch vehicle with
transformational capability and a wide range of
applications. The ability to fly to space, perform a
mission, return, refuel, and fly again almost
immediately enables in-space and terrestrial
missions that are simply not possible with
traditional vehicles. Radian is leveraging existing
enabling technologies with high technology readiness
levels and integrating them in ways never done
before.
"Wings offer capabilities and
mission types that are simply not possible with
traditional vertical takeoff right circular cylinder
rockets," said Livingston Holder, Radian's
co-founder, CTO and former head of the Future Space
Transportation and X-33 program at Boeing. "What we
are doing is hard, but it's no longer impossible
thanks to significant advancements in materials
science, miniaturization, and manufacturing
technologies."
Radian's new approach is
expected to uncork existing aerospace markets and
create entirely new ones.
"We believe that widespread
access to space means limitless opportunities for
humankind," said Richard Humphrey, CEO and
co-founder of Radian. "Over time, we intend to make
space travel nearly as simple and convenient as
airliner travel. We are not focused on tourism, we
are dedicated to missions that make life better on
our own planet, like research, in-space
manufacturing, and terrestrial observation, as well
as critical new missions like rapid global delivery
right here on Earth."
Radian will focus on mission
types that align with its unique capabilities, many
of which can only be done because of its winged
configuration. The company already has launch
service agreements with commercial space stations,
in-space manufacturers, satellite, and cargo
companies, as well as agreements with the U.S.
government and selected foreign governments.
"Radian is leveraging a unique
combination of technologies with an optimized
business model to unlock what I like to call 'the
potential of space,' serving existing aerospace
markets and catalytically enabling new ones," said
Doug Greenlaw, a former chief executive of Lockheed
Martin and one of Radian's investors and strategic
advisors. "We're talking about materially enabling
an industry that's expected to grow to $1.4 trillion
in less than a decade and Radian is doing what's
known as the 'Holy Grail' of accessing space with
full reusability and responsiveness to provide
customers unmatched cost effectiveness and
flexibility."
The addressable commercial
market opportunity for Radian's disruptive launch
vehicle is estimated to be $200 billion. Radian's
goal is to steadily mature its core technologies;
eventually permitting aircraft-like flight cadence
at lower per mission cost.
"On demand space operations is
a growing economy, and I believe Radian's technology
can deliver on the right-sized, high-cadence
operations that the market opportunity is showing,"
said Dylan Taylor, Chairman and CEO of Voyager Space
and an early personal investor in Radian. "I am
confident in the team working at Radian and look
forward to cheering them along in this historical
endeavor."