Blue Origin's reusable New Shepard suborbital vehicle took to the skies today (Dec. 12) for the first time in more than a year, according to media reports and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

New Shepard — a rocket-capsule combo that Blue Origin is developing to take passengers and research payloads to suborbital space — lifted off from the company's test facility in West Texas, according to an FAA launch license that Geekwire noticed.

Details are sketchy. Blue Origin, which is run by billionaire Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, has not released any information about the test. But the website Parabolic Arc reported via Twitter that the flight was a success, with Blue Origin recovering both the booster and the capsule. [In Photos: Blue Origin's New Shepard 2.0 Aces Maiden Test Flight]

A New Shepard hadn't flown since October 2016, when the vehicle aced a test of its in-flight abort system. That suborbital mission marked the fifth successful launch and landing of the same individual New Shepard vehicle over a span of 11 months.

Blue Origin representatives said at the time that they planned to retire that booster and capsule, so the vehicle that flew today was presumably a new one on its uncrewed maiden launch.

New Shepard is designed to fly up to six passengers on brief jaunts to suborbital space. The booster comes back to Earth for a vertical touchdown via engine burns, in much the same way first stages of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rockets do during orbital flights.

The unpiloted New Shepard capsule, meanwhile, lands softly under a parachute. The capsule features the biggest windows ever to fly in space, along with 530 cubic feet (15 cubic meters) of interior volume — enough for folks to turn somersaults inside, Blue Origin representatives have said. The company has not revealed how much a ticket to ride New Shepard will cost.

Today's test flight may well presage some big things from Blue Origin in the near future. The company has said it plans to begin commercial flights of New Shepard soon — perhaps as early as next year.

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.