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© Lockheed Martin
Electronics Production |

Lockheed Martin opens new STAR center

Lockheed Martin has opened its Florida-based "factory of the future", an advanced manufacturing facility to expand Orion spacecraft production.

The company has opened its Spacecraft Test, Assembly and Resource (STAR) Center. Lockheed Martin says that the STAR Center features business and digital transformation innovations that will expand manufacturing, assembly and testing capacity for NASA's Orion spacecraft program and ultimately, future space exploration. Lockheed Martin currently assembles the Orion spacecraft for the Artemis I and II Moon missions at the nearby Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout (O&C) building at NASA's Kennedy Space Center. The addition of the STAR Center provides much-needed space for the new production phase of Orion, allowing future Orion spacecraft – starting with the Artemis III mission – to be built faster, a press release reads. "The STAR Center is a spacecraft factory of the future and is the centerpiece of our commitment to build sustainable and affordable capabilities for NASA to send astronauts to explore the Moon and eventually Mars," says Lisa Callahan, Commercial Civil Space vice president and general manager at Lockheed Martin Space in the press release. "We are using advanced manufacturing capabilities and digital-first technologies to speed production and improve quality to get Orion from factory to space faster than ever before." Lockheed Martin acquired the building that formerly housed the Astronaut Training Experience attraction and spent 18 months and nearly USD 20 million renovating and modernizing the 55,000 square-foot space into a digitally-transformed factory of the future. More than 30 machines at the STAR center will be connected to Lockheed Martin's Intelligent Factory Framework (IFF), as well as machines at NASA's O&C, giving all production team members at both facilities real-time access to valuable data. The center also employs remote access, monitoring and alerting technologies for equipment, plus smart tools such as virtual reality and augmented reality. Under Lockheed Martin's production contract with NASA, the agency has committed to order Orion vehicles for six missions, with the potential to add another six through 2030. Elements of the spacecraft that take large amounts of floor space and that are built and tested outside the normal spacecraft assembly flow will be moved to the STAR Center. This gives production teams more room at the O&C facility to assemble and test more Orion spacecraft simultaneously and quicker.

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March 28 2024 10:16 am V22.4.20-1
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