I was reading a bit on Wikipedia and other sites about future American space travel vehicles and am a bit confused about what route we are taking now since Constellation was canceled and Orion was scaled back. How are we going to put men and women back in space and when? Thanks.
At the moment, the answer looks like
DragonRider. The uncrewed Dragon is flying now and could be rigged into a manned vehicle if we were desperate enough. The real manned version is considerably more than a Dragon with seats and air filters though, and is expected to first fly with a crew in 2015.
Boeing has their
CST-100, which can launch on the Atlas V, Delta IV, and Falcon 9. First launches will be on the Atlas V, but it is considerably more expensive than the Falcon 9. (The Delta IV is even more expensive.) Like DragonRider, it's to be operational in 2015, and its capabilities are similar. I don't see much reason to choose it unless either Falcon 9 or DragonRider turns out to have issues, but that very well may happen.
Sierra Nevada is working on the
Dream Chaser, which again uses the Atlas V as a launcher, but could potentially use others. It's to make manned flights in 2016, but is a lot more complex and needs a runway to land on. I think it's more likely to experience long development delays and be more expensive to fly than the others, but its shiny futuristic sci-fi spaceship looks make it popular with certain people.
Blue Origin's working on...
something. It's to use the Atlas V at first, and their own reusable booster system later on. They don't talk much about it.
The
Orion MPCV is to be launched on the SLS, a ridiculously expensive politically-motivated launch system that wouldn't enter regular operation until 2022 and would only be able to launch once a year, though it's doubtful that even that launch rate would fit in the budget. More realistically, the SLS will soon suffer the same fate as Constellation, leaving the MPCV without a launcher. An "Orion Lite" has been proposed that would fit on an Atlas V or Falcon 9.
ATK's
Liberty is/was an attempt to resurrect the Ares I. Ares I first stage glued to bits of an Ariane 5 as a second stage. They added an Orion-derived capsule of their own design when nobody wanted to fly their own spacecraft on it, and claimed they'd make manned flights by 2015. NASA didn't chose to fund Liberty, and ATK has said they were "moving on".