SpaceX Leases Florida Launch Pad for Rocket Landings

Falcon Heavy Booster Returns to Launch Pad
A Falcon Heavy booster returns to its landing site in this image from a SpaceX animation. (Image credit: SpaceX)

WASHINGTON – SpaceX plans to convert a launch pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, into a landing pad for the reusable rocket boosters it is developing to power its Falcon family of rockets.

The U.S. Air Force announced Feb. 10 that SpaceX has signed a five-year lease for Cape Canaveral's Launch Complex 13, which was used to launch Atlas rockets and missiles between 1956 and 1978. In its new role, it will serve as a landing pad for Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy booster cores launched from Florida, the Air Force said. Financial terms of the lease were not disclosed.

"The way we see it, this is a classic combination of a highly successful launch past morphing into an equally promising future," Brig. Gen. Nina Armagno, commander of the 45th Space Wing at Patrick Air Force Base, said in a Feb. 10 statement. "It's a whole new world, and the 45th Space Wing is committed to defining and building the Spaceport of the future." [SpaceX's Falcon Heavy Mega-rocket Will Land 3 Boosters (Video)]

SpaceX has designed the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket to fly back to the launch site and land using leftover propellant. A series of successful low-altitude landing tests in Texas led SpaceX in January to attempt to land an actual Falcon 9 booster on the deck of a ship positioned 600 kilometers downrange from Cape Canaveral. The booster, which had been used to loft SpaceX's Dragon capsule on its fifth paid cargo run to the International Space Station, made it back the ship, but crashed into the deck after running out of hydraulic fluid used by the four fins that help steer the stage.

"The way we see it, this is a classic combination of a highly successful launch past morphing into an equally promising future," Brig. Gen. Nina Armagno, commander of the 45th Space Wing at Patrick Air Force Base, said. (Image credit: U.S. Air Force/Patrick Air Force Base)

SpaceX plans to try again when it launches the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA and the U.S. Air Force. Liftoff is slated for Feb. 10 at 6:05 p.m.

Since 2010, SpaceX has launched the Falcon 9 rocket 13 times from Cape Canaveral's Space Launch Complex-40 and once from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. The DSCOVR launch marks the Falcon 9's 15th mission.

SpaceX has signed at least two other launch pad leases in recent months. Last year, the Hawthorne, California-based company leased Kennedy Space Center's Space Launch Complex-39A for Falcon Heavy launches and crewed Falcon 9 Dragon missions to the ISS.

In January, the Air Force told SpaceNews it is leasing Vandenberg's Space Launch Complex-4 West to SpaceX, giving the company neighboring launch sites on the service's western range. SpaceX has hinted it plans to develop a landing pad at that site as well.

This story was provided by SpaceNews, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

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Editor-in-Chief, Sightline Media

Mike Gruss is a veteran defense reporter and Editor-in-Chief of Sightline Media Group, which includes Army Times, Air Force Times, Dense News, Military Times and Navy Times. From 2013 to 2016, Mike served as a Senior Staff Writer for SpaceNews covering national security space programs and military space policy in the U.S. Congress. Mike earned a bachelor's degree in English and American Studies from Miami University and has previously wrote for the Journal Gazette in Fort Wayne, Indiana and the Virginian-Pilot in Virginia before joining SpaceNews. Prior to joining Sightline in 2017, he was a senior editor of FedTech magazine covering technology in federal government. You can see Mike's latest project on Twitter.