| Manufacturer | OKB-52 |
|---|---|
| Country of origin | Soviet Union |
| Operator | Soviet space program |
| Applications | Carry cosmonauts around the Moon and back to Earth |
| Production | |
| Status | Canceled |
| Related spacecraft | |
| Derivatives | LK-700, TKS spacecraft |
LK-1 was a projected Soviet manned lunar flyby spacecraft. The project started in 1962, with the lead engineer being Vladimir Chelomey.
The LK-1 had its origin in several early 1960s spacecraft projects under the generic names of kosmoplans and raketoplans.
It would be launched on a three-stage Proton launch vehicle. The first flight was planned for 1967.
In 1965 the project was cancelled in favour of the Soyuz 7K-L1 spacecraft.
Further developments came as the LK-700 direct-descent lunar lander program.
The spacecraft consisted of the following modules: