Madrid’s Orbital Paradigm aims to prove a cheaper path to orbital reentry

Source: techcrunch
Author: Aria Alamalhodaei
Published: 9/4/2025
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Read original articleMadrid-based startup Orbital Paradigm, founded by aerospace veteran Francesco Cacciatore and Víctor Gómez García, is developing a low-cost reusable reentry capsule aimed at enabling frequent orbital return missions. After initially focusing on in-space robotics, the company pivoted to building a minimal test capsule called KID—a 25-kilogram, 16-inch-wide vehicle without propulsion—designed to demonstrate survival through hypersonic reentry and data transmission from orbit. With under €1 million spent and a nine-person team, Orbital Paradigm plans to launch KID within months, carrying payloads for customers including French startup Alatyr and Germany’s Leibniz University Hannover. The capsule will not be recovered but aims to prove key reentry technologies at a fraction of the cost of larger systems like SpaceX’s Dragon.
Orbital Paradigm targets markets that require repeated orbital flights, such as biotech companies developing materials and therapies in microgravity, which often need multiple tests per year. Unlike larger spacecraft
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robotspace-technologyaerospaceorbital-reentryreusable-capsulemicrogravity-materialsspace-robotics