Bezos Is Building A House For His Big Brother

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Blue Origin and its founder Jeff Bezos do a little one-upmanship on the old saying, "go big or go home." With the groundbreaking of their new orbital vehicle manufacturing complex, they are going big AND going home. The new facility will be located near Kennedy Space Center in Florida and will house Blue Origin's orbital launch vehicle, which Bezos has sometimes referred to as "Very Big Brother." The new facility has a planned grand opening of December 2017.

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Site preparation for Blue Origin's new orbital vehicle manufacturing complex in Florida. Credit: Blue Origin. [/caption]

Blue Origin

announced the plans for the complex in September 2015, and bulldozers started clearing ground this week (June 28, 2016). The facility will be where Blue Origin manufactures, processes, integrates and tests its rockets.

"It's exciting to see the bulldozers in action," Bezos wrote in an email update. "We're clearing the way for the production of a reusable fleet of orbital vehicles that we will launch and land, again and again."

Bezos said the 750,000 square foot (70,000 sq. meter) building will be "custom-built from the ground up" and will enable "large scale friction stir welding and automated composite processing equipment," among other things.

The entire launch vehicle will be manufactured in this new facility except for the engines, the BE-4 -- which Blue Origin says will be flight qualified by 2017 -- and are currently produced in Blue Origin's Kent, Washington facility. But they plan to build a new, larger engine production facility to accommodate their projected need for higher production rates, and they will conduct a site selection process for that facility later this year.

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Another artist concept of Blue Origin's orbital vehicle manufacturing complex in Florida. Credit: Blue Origin. [/caption]

Another little one-upmanship: Blue Origin's new facility will best SpaceX's main factory, which is about 550,000 square feet (51,000 sq. meters). SpaceX's Hawthorne, California building was originally used by Northrup Aircraft to build 747 fuselages (although, SpaceX's total campus of buildings in Hawthorne is over 1.6 million square feet.)

Very Big Brother (VBB) will get an official name at some point, but it will be a vertical takeoff, vertical landing (VTVL) system, like Blue Origin's smaller suborbital New Shepard rocket. The plan is to have VBB's lower stage be reusable and the upper stage be expendable.

For launches, Blue Origin will share Cape Canaveral Air Force Station's Space Launch Complex 36 with Google Lunar X PRIZE team Moon Express (MoonEx).

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The New Shepard rocket launching from its facility in West Texas. Image: Blue Origin[/caption]

Nancy Atkinson

Nancy Atkinson

Nancy Atkinson is a space journalist and author with a passion for telling the stories of people involved in space exploration and astronomy. She is currently retired from daily writing, but worked at Universe Today for 20 years as a writer and editor. She also contributed articles to The Planetary Society, Ad Astra (National Space Society), New Scientist and many other online outlets.

Her 2019 book, "Eight Years to the Moon: The History of the Apollo Missions,” shares the untold stories of engineers and scientists who worked behind the scenes to make the Apollo program so successful, despite the daunting odds against it. Her first book “Incredible Stories From Space: A Behind-the-Scenes Look at the Missions Changing Our View of the Cosmos” (2016) tells the stories of 37 scientists and engineers that work on several current NASA robotic missions to explore the solar system and beyond.

Nancy is also a NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador, and through this program, she has the opportunity to share her passion of space and astronomy with children and adults through presentations and programs. Nancy's personal website is nancyatkinson.com