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SpaceX unveils sleek new spaceship

Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, on Thursday unveiled an upgraded passenger version of the Dragon cargo ship NASA buys for resupply runs to the International Space Station.

SpaceX’s new Dragon V2 spacecraft.Getty Images

Rather than parachuting down into the ocean, the new capsule is outfitted with beefed up motors and landing legs to make precision touchdowns on land, said SpaceX founder and chief executive Elon Musk, a billionaire technology entrepreneur who also runs the Tesla Motors Inc electric car company.

“You’ll be able to land anywhere on Earth with the accuracy of a helicopter … That is how a 21st century spaceship should land,” Musk said before a jam-packed audience at SpaceX’s Hawthorne, Calif., headquarters.

More than 32,500 people also watched the Dragon unveiling on a live SpaceX webcast.

Lifting the vehicle’s hatch, Musk settled into a reclined gold-and-black pilot’s seat and pulled down a sleek, rounded glass control panel. The cabin, designed to fly a crew of seven, looked more like a Star Trek movie set than the flight deck of NASA’s now-retired space shuttle.

Dragon, which launches on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, is one of three privately owned space taxis vying for NASA development funds and launch contracts.

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The SpaceX Dragon 2 spacecraft at it's unveiling ceremony in Los Angeles.
The SpaceX Dragon V2 spacecraft at it's unveiling ceremony in Los Angeles.EPA
Guest Robin Lee walks out of the SpaceX Dragon V2 cabin at the SpaceX headquarters.
Guest Robin Lee walks out of the SpaceX Dragon V2 cabin at the SpaceX headquarters.AP Photo
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Retired NASA astronaut and current SpaceX engineer Garrett Reisman stands inside SpaceX's new seven-seat Dragon V2 spacecraft.
Retired NASA astronaut and current SpaceX engineer Garrett Reisman stands inside SpaceX's new seven-seat Dragon V2 spacecraft.Getty Images
A view from outside the entry hatch inside SpaceX's new seven-seat spacecraft.
A view from outside the entry hatch inside SpaceX's new seven-seat spacecraft.Getty Images
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SpaceX's retractable landings legs.
SpaceX Dragon V2's retractable landings legs.Getty Images
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk walks out of the Dragon V2.
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk walks out of the Dragon V2.Getty Images
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The U.S. space agency turned over space station cargo runs and crew ferry flights after retiring its fleet of shuttles in 2011. SpaceX already has a $1.6 billion contract for 12 station resupply missions. Orbital Sciences Corp has a separate, $1.9 billion contract for eight cargo flights.

NASA also has been working with SpaceX, Boeing Co and privately owned Sierra Nevada Corp on a related commercial program to develop spaceships to fly astronauts, with the goal of breaking Russia’s monopoly on station crew transports before the end of 2017.

The United States currently pays Russia more than $60 million per person for round-trip flights on the Russian Soyuz capsule. The price climbs to more than $70 million in 2016 and to $76 million in 2017.

Musk hopes to bring down the cost of flying in space by reusing both the Falcon 9 rockets and Dragon spaceships.

“So long as we continue to throw away rockets and spacecraft we will never have true access to space. It’ll always be incredibly expensive. If aircraft were thrown away with each flight, nobody would be able to fly … or very few,” Musk said.

NASA is expected to select one or two space taxi designs this summer for final development and test flights.