Daily Press

DIVING IN TO DRONES

Huntington Ingalls announces plan to invest in unmanned systems with new Hampton facility that will construct undersea vehicles for military

- By Josh Reyes Staff writer

HAMPTON — Huntington Ingalls Industries plans to build undersea drones at a facility in Hampton, anticipati­ng greater demand for the unmanned submarines by the Navy.

Tuesday, officials from Hampton and Huntington Ingalls, along with Gov. Ralph Northam, broke ground on the Unmanned Systems Center of Excellence near the intersecti­on of Commander Shepard Boulevard and North Campus Parkway.

Huntington Ingalls — known for building aircraft carriers, submarines and other ships — is venturing into relatively new territory by expanding work on unmanned systems. The company acquired unmanned systems developers in recent years and is producing small — light enough for a person to carry — to medium-sized drones, according to Andy Green, executive vice president at Huntington Ingalls. That’s already made the company a leading builder of undersea drones, but the Hampton facility will be a significan­t expansion.

Once the new facility is complete, Huntington Ingalls can build large drones about 30 feet long. Green said the facility will manufactur­e and assemble parts for Boeing, which is constructi­ng ORCA XLUUV unmanned submarines for the Navy and could contribute to submarines up to 85 feet long.

“The Navy has a very high interest in unmanned vehicles,” Green said. “In order to fill that need, we really need to expand capacity to build those vehicles.”

In a recent speech delivered to the RAND Corporatio­n think tank, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said he expected “unmanned systems (to) perform a variety of warfightin­g functions, from delivering lethal fires and laying mines, to conducting resupply or surveillin­g the enemy.” Green said the military and developers are still thinking of all the applicatio­ns for unmanned submarines.

The facility in Hampton will consist of two buildings totaling about 150,000 square feet. Green said the company is investing about $50 million in the site and creating 250 jobs. The first phase of constructi­on will build a 20,000-square-foot building for basic assembly and will be complete by the end of 2020. The 130,000-square-foot second building will be done around the

end of 2021. Green said work done there would include machining, welding and building components for the larger unmanned systems.

Green said the facility would benefit from its proximity to the Navy, a skilled workforce in Hampton Roads and Newport News Shipbuildi­ng and its thousands of engineers. Even though the Hampton facility will be building unmanned systems, there’s plenty of experience building submarines and undersea vehicles at the shipyard, he said.

Hampton Mayor Donnie Tuck said the city was a fitting location for the facility, providing proximity to other science and defense institutio­ns, such as NASA Langley Research Center, the National Institute of Aerospace and Joint Base Langley–Eustis. He said the facility will help keep Hampton on the forefront of drone developmen­t and aerospace research.

Northam said Virginia competed with North Carolina to land the Huntington Ingalls facility, and grant incentives from the state could total up to $3 million, according to a news release. Northam said the facility will be a win-win, economical­ly benefiting Hampton, the region and Virginia while also supporting national defense.

 ?? KAITLIN MCKEOWN/STAFF ?? Officials break ground at the future site of Huntington Ingalls Industries Unmanned Systems Center of Excellence on Tuesday in Hampton.
KAITLIN MCKEOWN/STAFF Officials break ground at the future site of Huntington Ingalls Industries Unmanned Systems Center of Excellence on Tuesday in Hampton.
 ?? KAITLIN MCKEOWN/STAFF ?? Hampton Mayor Donnie Tuck and Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam share a congratula­tory elbow bump following a groundbrea­king ceremony at the future site of Huntington Ingalls Industries Unmanned Systems Center of Excellence on Tuesday in Hampton.
KAITLIN MCKEOWN/STAFF Hampton Mayor Donnie Tuck and Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam share a congratula­tory elbow bump following a groundbrea­king ceremony at the future site of Huntington Ingalls Industries Unmanned Systems Center of Excellence on Tuesday in Hampton.

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