Blue Origin facilities


The private aerospace company Blue Origin has a number of development, manufacturing, and test facilities in four US states: Washington, Texas, Florida, and Alabama.
Blue Origin began in 2000 with only a development and office facility near Seattle, Washington. By 2003 Blue was buying land in west Texas for a rocket engine test facility and, subsequently, for a suborbital rocket launch site.
Blue Origin is currently developing a new orbital launch facility at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and a nearby rocket assembly facility in Brevard County, Florida.

Development facility and headquarters

The company is headquartered on of industrial land in Kent, Washington, a suburb of Seattle, where its research and development is located. The facility was in size in early 2015, growing to by March 2016 with Blue Origin leasing additional space in adjacent office buildings., the Kent facility housed engineering, manufacturing and business operations and the majority of the 600-person Blue Origin workforce, which grew from about 350 persons at Kent in May 2015. They added an additional of office, manufacturing and warehouse space to their headquarters facilities in 2016 and 2017.
In late 2017, Blue purchased an additional —adding to their existing —of land on which they plan to build another of facility in Washington state.

Florida facilities

In September 2015, Blue Origin leased Launch Complex 36 in Cape Canaveral, Florida to build a launch pad for their orbital launch vehicle New Glenn. , the first Blue Origin launch from LC36 is planned for 2020. An August 2015 estimate predicted that initial launch happening earlier than 2020. Groundbreaking for the facility to begin construction occurred in June 2016. By March 2018, Blue's construction at LC-36 was lagging, but the company stated they did not think it would delay achieving the anticipated 2020 initial launch of New Glenn.
The Blue Origin orbital launch site will be situated on a total of 306 acres of leased land assembled from former Launch Complexes 11, 36A, and 36B. The land parcel will be used to build a rocket engine test stand for the BE-4 engine, a launch mount—called the Orbital Launch Site by Blue—and a reusable booster refurbishment facility for the New Glenn launch vehicle, which is expected to land on a seaborne platform and returned to Port Canaveral for refurbishment.
In addition, the manufacturing of "large elements, such as first stages, second stages, payload fairings, etc." will occur at the Blue launch vehicle production facility on Space Commerce Parkway in nearby Exploration Park, near the entrance to the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex on Merritt Island.
In October 2018, Stena Freighter, 182 meter cargo-ship purchased from ferry operator Stena Line, arrived in Florida from Spain. CEO Bob Smith, confirmed Stena Freighter would be used as the landing platform vessel for first-stage boosters. The landing ship will be hydrodynamically stabilized.

West Texas suborbital launch and engine test site

Blue Origin has a suborbital launch facility located in West Texas, near the town of Van Horn. Current launch license and experimental permits from the US government Federal Aviation Administration authorize flights of Blue Origin's New Shepard suborbital system,
, Blue Origin has a staff of approximately 50 supporting the West Texas facility.
The launch pad is located at, about north of the check-out building. The landing pad is located at, about north of a check-out building and north of the launch pad.
In addition to the suborbital launch pads, the West Texas site includes a number of rocket engine test stands. Engine test cells to support both hydrolox, methalox and storable propellant engines are present.
Included are three test cells just for testing the methalox BE-4 engine alone: two full test cells that can support full-thrust and full-duration burns, as well as one that supports short-duration, high-pressure preburner tests, to "refine the ignition sequence and understand the start transients."

Alabama engine manufacturing facility

In June 2016, Blue announced that they would build a new facility in Huntsville, Alabama to manufacture the large BE-4 cryogenic rocket engine.