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Tech

Astronaut Tim Peake launches Space Park Leicester

The space park could boost the regional economy by £750 million a year and create 2,500 jobs

Leicester Space Park opening day with Major Tim Peake

British astronaut Tim Peake has formally opened the new £100 million Space Park Leicester.

The European Space Agency astronaut and former International Space Station crew member was guest of honour at a ceremony at the space research, innovation and teaching cluster.

The space park, which it is hoped will boost the regional economy by £750 million a year and create 2,500 jobs, has already welcomed a string of high profile tech companies, including subsidiaries of Rolls-Royce and AST SpaceMobile as well as air quality specialists EarthSense and the government-backed Satellite Applications Catapult.

It has been developed by the University of Leicester in partnership with Leicester City Council and the Leicester and Leicestershire Enterprise Partnership and a central part of its operations will be the use of satellite data to help improve life on earth. A later stage could include a low-cost satellite production line.

The project builds on the university’s 61-year history of space research and its role in establishing the neighbouring National Space Centre, and places Leicester at the forefront of space technology in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Guests at the opening included 60 Leicester schoolchildren, who were among 160,000 across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ who engaged with activities hosted from Space Park Leicester in celebration of Mars Day.

Major Peake said: “Leicester has long been a key location for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s space sector, and it is a real privilege to formally open Space Park Leicester just a short distance away from the National Space Centre.