SpaceX, Blue Origin, Stoke, and others make major progress on Cape launch  facilities
Date:
Thu, 25 Sep 2025 20:08:30 +0000
Description:
The two spaceport launch facilities in the Cape Canaveral area  NASAs Kennedy  Space Center The post SpaceX, Blue Origin, Stoke, and others make major  progress on Cape launch facilities appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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The two spaceport launch facilities in the Cape Canaveral area  NASAs Kennedy  Space Center (KSC) and the U.S. Space Forces Cape Canaveral Space Force  Station (CCSFS)  are on the verge of even bigger changes than have been seen  in the last few years. In a recent flyover of the Cape, NSF obtained new  imagery that shows just how dramatically things are set to develop in the 
near future. 
SpaceX is making significant progress on its Starship program facilities for  KSCs Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A), the upcoming Giga Bay near Roberts Road, 
and even Space Launch Complex 37 (SLC-37) on the CCSFS side of the Cape. The  company has also begun preliminary work on a new landing facility at Space  Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40), its primary Falcon 9 launch pad in Florida. 
 
 
However, SpaceX is not the only game in town for launches from Florida, 
though it may seem like it given the companys prolific launch cadence. Blue  Origin is showing signs of progress toward launching its second New Glenn  rocket, and the company, owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, is embarking on 
a major expansion of its facilities at Exploration Park. 
Stoke Space, based in the Pacific Northwest, and Relativity, headquartered in  Long Beach, California, plan to join SpaceX and Blue Origin in the 
spaceflight market with their own reusability-enabled launch vehicles. The  companies are racing to finish launch facilities at CCSFS for their vehicles:  the fully reusable Nova for Stoke and the partially reusable Terran R for  Relativity. 
NASA is also progressing with processing activities for the Artemis II  mission, the first crewed flight to the vicinity of the Moon since December  1972. The Artemis program is also outfitting the Mobile Launcher 2 (ML2) with  systems necessary to support Space Launch System (SLS) Block 1B flights, even  as the program and NASA face budget uncertainty from Congress and the White  House. Five Starship tower segments thought to be for SLC-37 at the Roberts  Road facility. (Credit: Max Evans for NSF/L2) 
 SpaceX 
NSFs flyover imagery shows Starship-related progress underway at multiple  sites. While the launch pads are considered stage zero for Starship flights,  the Roberts Road facility is where pad items, both large and small, are  fabricated or delivered before being assembled on site. 
Five Starship tower segments were spotted at Roberts Road, with four of them  completed, a fifth nearing completion, and work started on a sixth. This 
tower would be the fourth Starship tower in the program when finished. The  company plans to build a number of towers, some of which will be for launches  and others for catching returning ships. 
The segments seen at Roberts Road appear to be for a launch tower rather than  a catch tower, as the fourth and fifth segments have hardware for a ship  quick-disconnect mount, similar to the towers at Starbase in Texas. It is not  currently known with certainty whether catch towers would have a quick  disconnect arm. The launch mount for the LC-39A Starship pad seen in its  assembly tent. (Credit: Max Evans for NSF/L2) 
The quick disconnect arm hardware seen at Roberts Road has four arm  connections, similar to the quick disconnect arm hardware seen at Starbases  Pad 2. Earlier quick disconnect arm hardware had three connections; it is  speculated that the fourth connection is for the upcoming Block 3 Starship. 
Though the Block 3 vehicle is stretched, Block 3 will sit lower on the launch  mount, necessitating these modifications. The LC-39A and Starbase Pad 1 
towers will need this modification to support Block 3, which will be flying  from Flight 12 onward. It is not known what Pad 1s fate will be after Flight  11, but LC-39As quick disconnect arm is being tested and outfitted. 
LC-39As launch mount, of the same design as that of Pad 2, is being built in 
a rolling tent on the Roberts Road premises. The mount has all four of its  manifolds on site; these manifolds are designed to feed the top deck with  water to cool it from the intense heat of a Starship launch. Oblique view of  Cape Canaveral launch pads from SLC-41 on the left to LC-36 on the right.  (Credit: Max Evans for NSF/L2) 
Each tower has nine segments, so the tower being constructed at Roberts Road  is about halfway through construction. This tower is likely being built for  the former United Launch Alliance (ULA) Delta IV launch facility at SLC-37,  which SpaceX is now converting for use with Starship. 
The NSF flyover of SLC-37 also showed possible flattening work on the area  where the Delta IV infrastructure used to be, as clearance operations 
continue on the complex. Foundation work could start very soon. 
The flyover revealed significant progress on Starship-related construction at  LC-39A since the last flyover in August. The flame trench for the Starship 
pad now has several wall pieces installed, and workers continue pouring  concrete into the trench. They are also working on the two flame bucket 
halves before their installation onto A-frames in the trench. LC-39A during  NSFs Sept. 19 flyover. (Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF/L2) 
Teams have also installed three of the four legs that will support the launch  mount, and are in the early stages of building a service structure, which 
will house plumbing and power lines that connect the launch pad to ground  systems. This structure is expected to be completed in a few months. 
Support structures are also in work for ground systems, and six cryogenic  tanks  four large and two small  have been installed in the area where it is  thought that the liquid oxygen storage tanks will be. Propellant transfer  lines from the tank farm area to the launch mount and pad are also being  installed, and at least one subcooler is now in place at the site. 
One large Liebherr LR 11000 crane is now at the LC-39A site. This crane had  originally been ordered to build a Mega Bay in Florida, but the plan was  changed, and it was instead used for the Mega Bay building in Texas. Two LR  11000 cranes were used to lift the launch mount next to Pad 2 at Starbase. 
Two LR 11000 cranes  or one LR 13000, the worlds most powerful conventional  crawler crane  will be needed to place the launch mount at the pad next to 
the tower. Closeup image of crane work and tents at LC-39As Starship pad.  (Credit: Max Evans for NSF/L2) 
Another large area of activity to watch over the coming months and years is  progress on the massive Giga Bay, which will be about half the size of NASAs  Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) when complete. Workers have poured a large  amount of concrete and are installing four tower cranes in what will be the  transfer aisles, where Starships, boosters, and parts will be moved around  after the building is finished. 
While Starship operations are building up rapidly, SpaceX is also busy with  changes to its existing Falcon 9 launch pad at SLC-40. The company is 
clearing an area for a new landing pad at SLC-40, as leases for the former  Launch Complex-13 are set to expire, where the companys Landing Zones 1 and 2  are located. SpaceX hopes to have the new landing pad operational early next  year. Closeup image of SLC-40 at CCSFS. (Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF/L2) 
The company plans to launch up to 120 flights per year from SLC-40 alone, and  the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) recently released its environmental  assessment with a mitigated Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI), which  clears the way for the increased cadence and the landing pad. The mitigated  FONSI requires SpaceX to carry out some actions to reduce the environmental  impacts of these activities as part of the FAAs approval. 
While SpaceX is looking toward the future, the company continues to fly 
Falcon 9 vehicles at a pace poised to break last years record of 132 
launches. NSFs flyover spotted Falcon booster B1094 as it was in a horizontal  position after its recovery at Landing Zone 2 following the NG-23 mission, as  well as the engine section of the B1086 booster that was lost after a  post-landing fire during the Starlink Group 12-20 mission in March. B1085 was  also rolling out during the flyover to support the Starlink Group 10-27  launch, which took place on Sunday, Sept. 21. Blue Origins Exploration Park  campus during the NSF flyover on Sept. 19. (Credit: Max Evans for NSF/L2) 
 Blue Origin 
Exploration Park, Blue Origins main operations site in the Cape Canaveral  area, is undergoing continued work and expansion. Meanwhile, the companys New  Glenn partially reusable heavy-lift rocket shows signs of preparation for its  second launch, scheduled for later this fall on the NASA ESCAPADE mission. 
Though Blue Origin has only flown one New Glenn so far, it is building and  expanding its Cape facilities to handle an expected large increase in launch  cadence. The company is also developing hardware for future flights beyond  ESCAPADE, with a second stage planned for flight four being tested at the 
2CAT second-stage cleaning and testing facility. 
The Metal Forming Facilitys exterior is close to completion, while foundation  work is underway for both a new hardware integration facility for New Glenn  and an expansion for the already large main production building. Second stage  for a future New Glenn flight being tested at the 2CAT facility. (Credit: Max  Evans for NSF/L2) 
Another expansion on the northwest corner of Exploration Park, featuring a 
new off-site light manufacturing facility and a vertical refurbishment  facility for boosters between Exploration Park and Launch Complex 36 (LC-36),  is also planned or already underway. 
The Lunar Plant 1 at Exploration Park is already starting operations. Future  Blue Moon Mk1 landers will be built here, with a transport container 
typically used for Mk1 landers currently staged outside the facility where 
Mk1 is being constructed. 
Blue Origin also recently assembled and tested a large deployable sunshield 
at Lunar Plant 1, which will protect both Lunar Transporter and the Blue Moon  Mk2 crewed lunar lander while they are docked. The first test article  assembled and tested in Lunar Plant 1: our Lunar Transporter sunshield! 
Designed to be one of the largest deployable shields in space, it will 
protect both our Transporter and Blue Moon MK2 Crew Lander from radiation  while the two vehicles are pic.twitter.com/rhyPLmypJx 
 Blue Origin (@blueorigin) September 22, 2025 
 
The New Glenn Transporter was seen moving past the VAB on Sept. 21, which  could indicate a possible rollout of New Glenn Flight 2s Glenn Stage 1 first  stage as soon as Oct. 5. 
Workers have conducted launch checkouts at LC-36 with the New Glenn Simulator  in the meantime, and a set of fairing transport trailers is parked at the 
door of the hangar near the launch tower for possible handling and movement  tests. 
All of the activities at LC-36 related to New Glenn show that Blue Origin is  working toward a launch before the end of the year. New Glenns first launch  was in January of this year, and the company had hoped to launch the second  flight as early as this spring or summer. However, additional work was 
needed, which appears to be nearing completion now. Closeup of Stoke Spaces  LC-14 complex. (Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF/L2) 
 Stoke, Relativity, and Artemis 
While SpaceX and Blue Origin are expanding their already large footprints in  the Cape Canaveral area, newcomers Stoke Space and Relativity Space are hard  at work building up their launch pads for flights that could take place as  early as next year. NASAs Artemis program is also working on the ML2 for SLS  flights past Artemis III while also working on Artemis II flight 
preparations. 
 See Also SpaceX Starship Program L2 Blue Origin Section NSF Store Click here  to Join L2 
Stoke Spaces launch facility at CCSFSs Launch Complex-14 (LC-14) now has a  flame diverter installed that will channel the exhaust from Novas seven first  stage Zenith engines, which utilize liquid methane and liquid oxygen, away  from the pad. LC-14s four lightning protection towers are noticeably taller  and taking shape, and a central umbilical tower is also under construction. 
The integration hangar for LC-14 has its exterior panels mostly in place,  allowing crews to work inside, protected from the weather. A new water tank  for the pads sound suppression and fire safety systems has also been 
installed next to the hangar. 
Besides the progress seen at LC-14 from NSFs last flyover of the Cape,  development of the Nova vehicle itself is progressing at the companys  facilities in the state of Washington. The second stages structural  qualification is now complete, indicating that the company is on track for a  possible 2026 launch. Relativity Spaces LC-16 complex. (Credit: Max Evans for  NSF/L2) 
Like Stoke Space, Relativity Space is in the advanced stages of developing a  partially reusable launch vehicle using methane and liquid oxygen as  propellants. Unlike Stoke Space, though, Relativity Space has flown a single  rocket from its launch facility at CCSFS. 
Relativitys only launch so far was the Terran 1 test flight from Launch  Complex 16 (LC-16) on March 22, 2023. However, after that flights failure, 
the company pivoted entirely to developing the partially reusable Terran R. 
LC-16s large integration hangar now has a more finished appearance with wall  and roof panels installed. This hangar is not only for rocket processing but  also appears to house a payload processing facility in its raised area, and  also has a lower area for office space. Foundation work is underway next to  LC-16s flame trench, which could be for the complexs water tower or for  lightning protection towers. More infrastructure work is planned for the  coming months. 
The Terran R first stage for the rockets first flight now has all of its  structural barrels complete, while the first flight engine for the stage is  complete. The company is testing the rockets thrust section, as well as the  second stages Aeon V engine, and is attempting to have its launch pad and  rocket ready for its first test flight sometime next year. Mobile Launcher 2,  being built for the SLS Block 1B, is seen during NSFs Sept. 19 flyover.  (Credit: Julia Bergeron for NSF/L2) 
NSFs flyover also showed progress on the NASA Artemis programs ML2 parked by  the VAB. The Tail Service Mast Umbilical is now installed on ML2s main deck,  while the Orion Service Module Umbilical and supports for the Crew Access Arm  are now installed further up the tower. The ML2 will not be used for the next  two Artemis missions but will be needed for Artemis IV and subsequent  missions, if these missions are flown. 
The SLS rocket for Artemis II is almost completely stacked with validation 
and checkouts complete, but still requires the stacking of the Orion  spacecraft and its launch abort system tower. The Orion Stage Adapter is at  KSC and will be rolled out to the VAB within the coming days for installation  atop the SLS Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS). The Orion spacecrafts  installation is expected sometime in early October. 
The Orion spacecraft itself is located in the Launch Abort System Facility  (LASF), and the Launch Abort System (LAS) rocket and fairing have been  installed, with only final close-out work remaining. Following the stacking 
of Orion and its LAS on SLS, the Artemis II SLS rocket will be fully 
assembled  a critical step in the journey to launching the mission. 
 (Lead image: KSCs Vehicle Assembly Building and Launch Complex 39A seen  during NSFs flyover on Sept. 19. Credit: Max Evans for NSF/L2) 
 
The post SpaceX, Blue Origin, Stoke, and others make major progress on Cape  launch facilities appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/09/ksc-flyover-091925/
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