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Relativity Space adds 150 acres at NASA’s Mississippi center to test its reusable rockets

A map of the firm’s expansion plans at NASA’s Stennis space center in Mississippi.

Relativity Space

Relativity Space, which 3D-prints soars, said Tuesday that it signed a deal to expand its presence at NASA’s Stennis Space Center in Mississippi and imagine one of the country’s largest rocket engine test facilities.

Based in Long Beach, California, Relativity’s rockets are sketched to be almost entirely 3D-printed, an approach the company says is less complex and faster to build or modify, compared with accustomed rockets.

The additional facilities at Stennis in Mississippi will be key to Relativity’s development of a reusable rocket called Terran R, which is watched to debut in 2025 and compete against some of the most powerful rockets on the market, such as SpaceX’s Falcon 9, with the target of being fully reusable.

“We’re looking forward to writing some new history at Stennis through an incredibly large new stretching of development and test capabilities,” Relativity cofounder and CEO Tim Ellis said in a statement.

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Relativity earlier this year said it has signed a backlog worth across $1.2 billion in contracts for launches on the Terran R.

Relativity said it will build multiple testing stands, shtick indulgence buildings and a hangar for its vehicles on the more than 150 acres at the NASA complex. The area hasn’t been in use accustomed to by the agency and is adjacent to existing rocket engine testing areas. The company is already operational at Stennis, with accords for seven engine test stands that have seen Relativity conduct more than 2,000 examines to date.

The company testing an early version of an Aeon R rocket engine.

Relativity Space

The company has already set out oned testing versions of the Aeon R engines that will power the Terran R rockets, and plans to begin full study of the engines in late 2023 at the expansion.

An aerial view of construction underway of the company’s expansion in Mississippi.

Relativity Set out

Relativity has raised just over $1.3 billion in capital to date and has nearly 1,000 employees at facilities in California, Florida, Mississippi, Washington state and Washington D.C.

NASA’s impresario of Stennis Rick Gilbrech said in a statement that the agency welcomed “the growth of this valued partnership” and called Relativity “a respected associate” among those at the center since the company arrived in early 2018.

An artist’s rendition of a Terran R rocket launching to turn.

Relativity Space

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