The future of travel: what holidays could look like in 2050
The future of travel

Space travel

Virgin Galactic’s mission is to make space travel accessible to everyone – as long as you can afford it, of course. Around 600 wannabe astronauts have already forked out $250,000 (£191,500) in the hope that they’ll one day have a two-hour flight aboard SpaceShip Two. The craft carries six passengers and two pilots.
Space travel

Space travel

Air taxis

Back on Earth, road rage could become a thing of the past, if Project Vahana is a success. It aims to create urban skyways populated by millions of small, self-flying air taxis. Dodgy drivers needn’t worry, they’re fully automated and able to sidestep obstacles. Best of all, they could exist by 2020.
Affordable helicopter taxis

Airbus are exploring several seriously cool innovations, but they’ve already changed the face of transport in São Paulo, Brazil, with Voom. It's a booking platform that enables you to order a helicopter taxi online. The cost? About the same as a private car transfer.
Hyperloop

The clever bods at Hyperloop One say their travel system will “eliminate the barriers of time and distance”, and they’re not wrong. If successful it could cut the hundred mile journey from Abu Dhabi to Dubai down to 12 minutes. That’s a massive improvement on the current 3.5-hour flight time.
Hyperloop

Hyperloop

Jet packs

Even big kids dream of being able to fly and this jet pack by JetPack Aviation could make that a real possibility. Strapped to your back, it’ll enable you to fly for 10 minutes at speeds of up to 60mph, plus it’s small enough to be stashed away in the boot of you car.
SkyTran

With its two-man pods whizzing above the traffic at 155mph, SkyTran’s computer-controlled monorail could squeeze a two-hour journey down to 10 minutes. The track runs 20ft in the air and can even be designed to go through buildings.
SkyTran

Concorde's baby brother

With speeds 10% faster than Concorde and 2.6X faster than regular planes, the brilliantly named Boom Overture is a supersonic jet that could radically shake up air travel.
Concorde's baby brother

The supersonic jet could slice the seven-hour flight from New York to Paris in half, and at $5,000 (£3,800) for a business class ticket, it’s fairly affordable. Over 70 jets have already been ordered by airlines, and they should be zipping around our skies by 2023.
The hoverbike

Star Trek fans will be thrilled to know that the Hoverbike may not be confined to science fiction for much longer. California-based Hoversurf has created a flying electric motorbike called the Scorpion 3. It might not look quite as cool as the one in this picture but, in time, Trekkies could be living out their dreams.
The flying bus

CityAirbus might look space age, but it could be in commercial use by 2023. The four-person aircraft is powered by battery and electricity, and with its ability to take off like a helicopter it could revolutionise city transport.
Adventures on Mars

He’s already pioneered Tesla cars and PayPal, now businessman and inventor Elon Musk has set his sights on Mars. The SpaceX entrepreneur hopes to build hundred-man spaceships that can take travellers on the 30-day flight as early as 2023.
Adventures on Mars

Adventures on Mars

The Hyperloop tunnel

The Hyperloop Hotel

The Hyperloop Hotel

Robotic hotel staff

Futuristic spa treatments

Beds that control your dreams

Portable treetop hotels

One thing’s for sure – by 2050, advances in transport and building will mean travel has become more sustainable. Florida architecture firm EoA has designed Living the Till, a portable treetop hotel. It’s in the running for an award from Radical Innovation, a contest that seeks out game-changing ideas in hospitality design. Can't wait until 2050? Here are the treetop stays you can experience now.
Portable treetop hotels

The underwater luxury hotel

If scuba diving’s your thing, you might want to start saving your pennies for a stay in the Water Discus hotel, which is slated for construction in Dubai. Divided into two sections, one 98 feet underwater and one 22 feet above, the UFO-like structure combines ultra luxury with ocean adventure.
Love a quirky hotel? You'll find 50 more unusual places to stay here.
The underwater luxury hotel

The above-water area has a restaurant and spa, but it’s under the water that things get exciting. The hotel will be surrounded by coral reefs, in tropical waters. In James Bond style, the dive centre has an airlock system, so divers can swim directly in and out of the ocean.
Check out the 17 destinations you'll want to visit while you still can.
The underwater luxury hotel

Bedrooms will have awesome ocean views and, just in case you haven’t had your fill of watery adventures, there’s a gigantic swimming pool on the top deck.
Now discover what air travel will look like in 2030.
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