The Oklahoman

Boeing OKC breaks ground on new B-52 facility

- By Dale Denwalt Staff writer ddenwalt@oklahoman.com

Boeing broke ground on a new high- bay lab facility for its B- 52 modernizat­ion and sustainmen­t efforts in Oklahoma City.

The 60,770 square- foot building will hold a wing and fuselage from a retired U. S. Air Force B- 52 bomber, so engineers can work hands- on with the airframe as they design new radar and engine components.

The structure, located at 6811 SW 59, is expected to be complete by the second quarter of 2021.

Boeing's B-52 modernizat­ion and sustainmen­t programs include the Commercial Engine Replacemen­t Program and Radar Modernizat­ion Program.

CERP is focused on replacing the B-52's eight engines with engines that provide economic, operationa­l and environmen­tal benefits, and RMP upgrades the radar on the aircraft to enhance navigation reliabilit­y to support nuclear and convention­al missions.

The U. S. Air Force hopes the aircraft, which first rolled off the line over six decades ago, will remain relevant and mission-ready through 2050 with these upgrades.

"This high-bay addition is going to enable us to do real-time prototypin­g with the fuselage and a wing in that building structure," said Nancy Anderson, Boeing OKC's vice president of aircraft modernizat­ion and modificati­on.

The B-52 Stratofort­ress undergoes maintenanc­e, repair and overhaul at nearby Tinker Air Force Base, but Anderson said it's impractica­l for Boeing to try out new designs

with aircraft on a tight schedule.

That's why having their own facility, housing actual pieces of the plane, are useful to Boeing engineers.

"Because the B-52 is an older plane and we don't have a lot of models for it, as we work on certain areas we'll model it," she said. "It's the best of both worlds; we have models and we can now get access to an airplane. We can't go over to Tinker where they're working on these airplanes real- time on a deadline."

Boeing OKC Chief of Staff Stormy Jones said those models designed and created on campus can be easily tested in the high-bay facility.

"The high- bay addition gives us that ability to have a hands-on form, fit and function testing

facility that we haven't had previously," Jones said. "It truly gives us the ability to bring our U.S. Air Force customer into the space and look at an actual full- scale fuselage, full- scale wing, and talk about the different factors that go into putting on new modificati­ons."

Other projects at Boeing's Oklahoma City facility, which mostly houses engineerin­g programs, will be moved inside the addition when complete.

Boeing expects to spend more than $ 20 million building the structure, which was designed by local architects at Guernsey, the same firm that designed Boeing Building 301 at the same campus.

Alberici is the constructi­on company leading the project.

 ?? [ILLUSTRATI­ON PROVIDED] ?? Boeing Oklahoma City's new high-bay addition, seen here in this rendering, will allow engineers hands-on access to a wing and fuselage of the B-52 Stratofort­ress as they modernize the bomber's engine and radar components.
[ILLUSTRATI­ON PROVIDED] Boeing Oklahoma City's new high-bay addition, seen here in this rendering, will allow engineers hands-on access to a wing and fuselage of the B-52 Stratofort­ress as they modernize the bomber's engine and radar components.

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