News

Building a new mobile launch platform for later Space Launch System missions could cost NASA $300 million but allow for more frequent launches, agency officials said.
NASA has awarded a contract for a second mobile launcher to be built at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for the Artemis program's voyages to the moon.
The estimated cost to build a bigger launch tower for a rocket that will bring humans back to the moon has more than tripled, according to a report that NASA’s auditor published Tuesday. The ...
NASA’s new mobile launcher under construction at Kennedy Space Center to support future Artemis moon missions grew up a little in the new year. Lead contractor Bechtel National Inc. on Friday ...
NASA's existing mobile launcher for the Artemis missions headed to Kennedy Space Center's Launch Pad 39-B while the first bolts were driven into what will become the second mobile launcher for ...
NASA's mobile launcher has completed a significant move from Launch Pad 39-B to the Vehicle Assembly Building after nearly two years of repairs, marking a crucial step toward the Artemis II mission.
Almost $1 billion. The tower in question is the Mobile Launcher designed for NASA’s upcoming Space Launch System, which would become the world’s most powerful rocket once completed in a few years.
NASA is not planning to develop a second mobile launch platform that could shorten the gap between the first two SLS missions.
NASA's 21st-century mobile rocket launch platform stands silhouetted by the morning sun in this striking view taken at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida this month. Railroad tracks loom ...
NASA will announce its new astronaut class in September, as well as details about the Artemis 2 crewed mission around the moon.
NASA opened its doors in Cape Canaveral for a last look at the mobile launcher as it makes its final roll on crawler transporter 2 to Launch Pad 39-B prior to the much anticipated Artemis mission ...
NASA announced Tuesday the plans to design and build a second mobile launcher, known as Mobile Launcher 2 or ML2, at Kennedy Space Center.