Uncategorized

Relativity Breaks New Ground at Stennis

Relativity Space signed a seven-year lease on a test stand at NASA’s Stennis Space Center in Mississippi to prepare for its 3D-printed Terran R rocket.

The company will pay $2.76M for the initial lease on the Apollo-era A-2 stand, and has the option to take out another 10 years if needed. Relativity already has 10-year leases on the E-2 and E-4 stands as well as a commercial use agreement on E-1. 

“The scale of Terran R as a medium-heavy lift reusable launch vehicle is substantial,” Relativity CEO Tim Ellis said in a statement. “Exclusive access to these rare, national-asset facilities through partnership with NASA uniquely enables Relativity to develop a world-class launch vehicle.”

Terran R

Relativity successfully launched its first 3D printed rocket, Terran 1, back in March…then quickly announced it was shelving the small-lift launcher in favor of developing the heavier-lift Terran R. A first flight is slated for 2026.

Terran R will also be additively manufactured, and Relativity is building brand-new 3D printing tech to build the rocket and its massive Aeon R engines.

Building at Stennis

Relativity has been plotting an expansion at Stennis for a while.  The company announced its plans to build several test stands and administrative offices at the historic site in November. Now, the company says it’s planning to commit $267M to the expansion.

  • Relativity is hiring for the site now as it ramps up operations.
  • The new lease will speed up the rocket testing cycles, the company said, hopefully allowing them to get back to space faster.
Related Stories
Policy

Trump Re-Nominates Jared Isaacman to Lead NASA

“The journey is never easy, but it is time to inspire the world once again to achieve the near-impossible—to undertake and accomplish big, bold endeavors in space…and when we do, we will make life better here at home and challenge the next generation to go even further,” Isaacman wrote on X on Tuesday evening following the nomination announcement.

InternationalPolaris

The Artemis Accords By the Numbers

The accords celebrated their fifth anniversary last month. As such, here’s a roundup of where they stand.

StartupsVC/PE

Reflex Aerospace Raises €50M Series A

Reflex will use the capital to expand the manufacturing capacity at its facility in Bavaria, which will be able to churn out 60 to 70 highly complex satellites per year, according to CEO Walter Ballheimer.

Launch

Canadian Spaceport Co. Attracts Heavyweight MDA Space

MDA Space ($MDA) committed $10M CDN ($7.1M) to Maritime Launch Services (MLS), making MDA an equity owner in the company and strategic partner in the push to establish sovereign, orbital launch capabilities at MLS’ Spaceport Nova Scotia.