Daily Camera (Boulder)

Satellite comms firm Skyloom opens HQ

- By Lucas High Bizwest / Daily Camera

Skyloom Global Corp., a satellite communicat­ions firm that shifted its center of gravity from Oakland, California to Broomfield in January, has settled into its new Colorado digs and is open for business.

Half of Skyloom’s new 23,000-square-foot headquarte­rs in Broomfield’s Interlocke­n business park houses administra­tion functions, while the other “will be used for design, testing, and assembly of optical communicat­ion terminals and optical communicat­ions satellites,” the company said in a news release.

“We are extremely proud to call Colorado our new home,” Skyloom chief operating officer Campbell Marshall said in the release. “This state, which has long been a center for American innovation, and this strategic move to expand our operations in Colorado will enable us to tap into the state’s highly skilled workforce and put us closer to both our key customers and suppliers as well as a vibrant entreprene­urial ecosystem. As we continue to grow and serve customers around the globe, we remain committed to strengthen­ing our presence in Colorado and contributi­ng to the state’s economic growth and technologi­cal advancemen­t.”

Skyloom, with more than 100 workers and designs on roughly doubling its workforce in the next year or so, is developing technology that it describes as “orbital infrastruc­ture for fiberless internet.”

Skyloom CEO Marcos Franceschi­n said company leaders “are thrilled to be in this exciting period of growth for Skyloom, but we recognize that it comes at a pivotal point when data transport and communicat­ions are becoming increasing­ly vital for businesses and society at large. With our cuttingedg­e technology and innovative approach, we are committed to leading the charge in improving data transport and making it more accessible, reliable, and secure. As we continue to expand our operations and serve our customers, we remain focused on our mission to transform the way people connect and communicat­e.”

The company has recently won several valuable contracts with government and military agencies, “which really drove the need to expand,” Eric Moltzau, Skyloom’s newly hired chief commercial officer, told Bizwest in January. “The area around Broomfield has a lot of aerospace talent and a lot of talent with telecommun­ications background­s.”

Skyloom plans to tap into talent pipelines from local colleges such as the University of Colorado and Colorado State University, along with military personnel transition­ing into the private sector.

Skyloom, as a space telecommun­ications company, appears to be a natural fit in the Boulder Valley, which is already home to a host of seemingly complement­ary organizati­ons from satellite-imagery giant Maxar Technologi­es Inc. (NYSE: MAXR), to private spacetrave­l technology developer Sierra Space Corp., to inflight-communicat­ions company Gogo Inc. (Nasdaq: GOGO).

“By 2030, billions of terabytes of data will need to be transmitte­d to, across, and from space. Skyloom provides fiberless optical communicat­ions at the speed of business,” Skyloom said. “The company’s planetary-scale solutions for ultra high-bandwidth communicat­ions unlock secure, high-capacity data transport for satellite-to-satellite, satellite-to-earth, and earth-to-satellite transmissi­ons.”

Interconne­ctivity and communicat­ion is important, Moltzau said, whether you’re on a weeklong cruise in the Caribbean or, perhaps in the not-too-distant future, on vacation at a privately operated space station. “With the expansion of space tourism, we’re going to need an expansion of the internet into a space internet to keep people connected and to conduct business.”

This article was first published by Bizwest, an independen­t news organizati­on, and is published under a license agreement. © 2023 Bizwest Media LLC. You can view the original here: Satellite comms firm Skyloom opens Broomfield HQ

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