When it comes to high-end dining, it doesn’t come much higher than a new venture promising a meal that is truly out of this world.
A space tourism company is offering diners the chance to travel to the edge of space on a huge balloon, where they were be treated to Michelin-starred cuisine at 15.5 miles (25 km) above the Earth.
The only catch is you’ll have to pick up the bill before you go — and it isn’t cheap.
Pre-sale tickets for the 2025 flight have been priced at an eye-watering £105,000 (€120,000) per person.
Zephalto plans to launch the balloon from France on a six-hour experience that will include three hours at its highest altitude — above 98 per cent of the atmosphere and twice as high as the average commercial jet.
High up: Space tourism company Zephalto is offering diners the chance to travel to the edge of space on a huge balloon, where they were be treated to Michelin-starred cuisine at 15.5 miles (25 km) above the Earth
Pre-sale tickets for the 2025 flight have been priced at £105,000 (€120,000) per person
The balloon’s capsule, which has a large panoramic window and can carry six passengers and two pilots, ascends at a speed of 4m/s and takes an hour-and-a-half to reach its peak altitude.
Once at the edge of space, guests aboard the Céleste stratospheric balloon will get to take in a breathtaking panorama of the Earth, sun and the stars that has previously been reserved only for astronauts.
Travellers even get a luxury culinary experience, with meals cooked by famous French chefs and wine that is selected by a renowned sommelier.
Not only that, but the luxurious journey can even be accompanied by music of the passenger’s choice, or they can choose ‘space silence’.
The only thing some space fans might find it lacking is the chance to experience zero gravity.
Unlike flights in Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin rocket New Shepard, which takes passengers more than 60 miles (100 km) above the Earth’s surface, gravity is not lost on the Céleste.
‘We choose 25 kilometres high because it’s the altitude where you are in the darkness of space, with 98 per cent of the atmosphere below you, so you can enjoy the curvature of the Earth in the blue line,’ Zephalto founder Vincent Farret d’Astiès told Bloomberg.
‘You’re in the darkness of space, but without the zero-gravity experience.’
He added: ‘I am thrilled to have built the bridge between my dream of space travel and reality.
‘Those who share my desire to travel in harmony with the elements and the wind, can finally do so onboard Céleste.
‘Our expert team has been working very hard to create a vessel that the Montgolfier brothers would have been proud of.
‘We choose 25 kilometres high because it’s the altitude where you are in the darkness of space, with 98 per cent of the atmosphere below you, so you can enjoy the curvature of the Earth in the blue line,’ Zephalto founder Vincent Farret d’Astiès (right) told Bloomberg. He is pictured with the balloon’s designer Joseph Dirand
Vincent Farret d’Astiès (pictured) said: ‘I am thrilled to have built the bridge between my dream of space travel and reality’
‘After years of working on the approach, design and technical solutions, the concept is now palpable and will offer an extraordinarily immersive experience that will stage our Earth and space to the most affluent of travellers.’
Zephalto plans to run 60 flights a year and markets itself as a less-impactful way to see the Earth from above.
Fears have been raised that some space tourism ventures, including Bezos’ Blue Origin and Virgin Galactic’s Sir Richard Branson, could have a bigger impact on global warming than the aviation industry.
In response to this, Zephalto says it offers the least-polluting way of reaching the stratosphere, using a balloon filled with helium and hydrogen.
Booking is now open for the company’s first journeys beginning in two years’, with a deposit of £8,800 (€10,000) needed to secure a place on board.
There is no age limit or special training required to board the balloon flight — as long as a person is fit to fly on an aeroplane they can travel on the Celeste.
Zephalto is not the only company hoping to offer such ventures.
Its rival Space Perspectives, an American company, is also planning to begin balloon journeys from next year.