Space Station Is Marking a Huge Anniversary

There's been a nonstop human presence on the ISS for 25 years
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 30, 2025 11:51 AM CDT
Space Station Is Marking a Huge Anniversary
In this photo provided by NASA, Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield plays guitar in the cupola module of the International Space Station on Dec. 25, 2012.   (NASA via AP)

It's an unprecedented space streak: 25 years of people living off-planet without even a moment's pause. The International Space Station marks a quarter-century of continuous occupancy this weekend, boasting a guest list of nearly 300 over the years—mostly professional astronauts but also the occasional space tourist and movie director, the AP reports. The first full-time residents opened the hatch on Nov. 2, 2000. With only five years left at the scientific outpost, NASA is counting on private companies to launch their own orbiting stations with an even bigger and wider clientele. A look at what has been and what is ahead:

  • The station's first astronauts: NASA's Bill Shepherd and Russia's Sergei Krikalev and Yuri Gidzenko took off in a Russian Soyuz rocket from Kazakhstan on Oct. 31, 2000. They reached the dark, humid, three-room station two days later and spent almost five months on board, making the place not only functional but hospitable. Shepherd, a former Navy SEAL who retired in 2002, serves on a space station advisory committee with Krikalev, now a high-ranking Russian space official. While relations between the US and Russia are "quite bad" on the national level, "person to person and even space agency to space agency, they're actually quite good," Shepherd tells the AP.
  • 290 visitors and counting: By NASA's count, 290 people from 26 countries have visited the space station. Seven are up there right now, representing the US, Russia, and Japan. Most of the visitors have flown courtesy of their homelands. The first to pay his own way, California businessman Dennis Tito, launched with the Russians in 2001 over NASA's objections. Hungry for cash, Russia continued flying private clients, including a Russian movie crew in 2021. NASA now embraces space tourism, inviting private crews for two-week stays.

  • Close calls aboard the space station: Operations may look easy and ho-hum as astronauts come and go, but "there's nothing routine about it," former NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said at a recent presentation. Among the more serious stumbles: a spacewalker's near-drowning, a docking that sent the station into a wild spin, persistent cracks and air leaks, and the ever-growing threat of space junk.
  • Touches of home: Space station life has improved drastically since Shepherd and his crew toughed it out. "It's a four-star hotel now," he said. "You couldn't ask for better accommodations, at least in space." Now the size of a football field with multiple labs, the station has an internet phone for astronauts' personal use and a glassed-in cupola, or dome, for prime Earth views and performances. Canada's guitar-playing astronaut Chris Hadfield famously performed David Bowie's "Space Oddity" and other tunes from that perch more than a decade ago. Experimental hothouses also have added color and zip, yielding chile peppers and zinnias. An espresso machine even got a brief tryout, as did a cookie-baking oven. But there's still no shower or laundry—sponge baths only, with dirty clothes tossed instead of washed.

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  • Highs and lows of station life: Astronauts have gotten married and welcomed newborn children while serving on the space station. One of the new space dads, Mike Fincke, is up there again, more than 20 years after he dialed in from orbit to his wife's delivery room. Station residents have also dealt with heartbreak. An astronaut's mother was killed in a car accident in 2007. And in 2011, Scott Kelly was midway through a five-month stay when his sister-in-law, US Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, was shot in the head and survived. Others have had to cope with delayed returns, the most recent and extreme case involving stuck astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams. Their planned weeklong test flight of Boeing's new Starliner capsule turned into a station stay of more than nine months.
  • Science in zero gravity: Thousands of experiments have been conducted, many on the astronauts themselves. Medical tests took on increased urgency several years ago when an astronaut discovered a blood clot in one of their jugular veins. Doctors oversaw treatment from afar until the patient was safely back home.
  • SpaceX will handle the station's demise: NASA is paying SpaceX nearly $1 billion to boot the space station from orbit in early 2031. The company will launch a heavy-duty capsule to dock with the station and steer it to a fiery reentry over the Pacific. Before that happens, Axiom Space will remove the module it plans to send to the station. That free-flying module will form the nucleus of Axiom's own space station. Other companies are working on their own concepts.

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