Los Angeles Times

Aerospace Corp. to upgrade El Segundo campus

The lab will spend $100 million on its local site even as it relocates its offices to Virginia.

- By Laurence Darmiento

Research and developmen­t lab Aerospace Corp. moved its headquarte­rs this week to Virginia from El Segundo but reaffirmed its commitment to its South Bay campus by announcing a $100-million investment there.

The federally funded nonprofit corporatio­n, which supports government and private-sector space work, said there would be no “significan­t relocation of current employees” in the move to Chantilly, Va., where it has another campus, but said industry changes required it.

“The space domain has transforme­d over the last decade, reshaped by rapidly advancing threats, cuttingedg­e technologi­es and a fast-growing commercial sector,” Chief Executive Steve Isakowitz said in a prepared statement. “By shifting our headquarte­rs to the Washington, D.C. metro region, we will deepen our ties with key decision makers and stakeholde­rs, and reaffirm our commitment to working side-by-side with our partners as they carry out our nation’s critical missions.”

In relocating its top management to the nation’s center of politics and government, Aerospace joins a growing number of aerospace and defense contractor­s that have made the move.

Last year, RTX Corp., which has facilities in El Segundo and was based in Waltham, Mass., said it was moving its headquarte­rs to Arlington, Va. Embattled Boeing Corp., a major defense contractor, also said it was moving its global headquarte­rs to Arlington, from Chicago.

They joined major defense contractor­s already headquarte­red in the region, including General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, whose 2011 move from Los Angeles was a blow to Southern California’s aerospace industry, though it continues to maintain extensive operations here.

Aerospace Corp. is nowhere near the size of large defense contractor­s but plays a key role in supporting the nation’s space industry with cutting-edge technologi­es and consulting services. It has 4,600 employees nationwide, including 2,800 in El Segundo. Other major facilities are in Chantilly, Albuquerqu­e and Colorado Springs, Colo.

Founded in 1960, the lab has provided assistance to projects that include the Defense Department’s Global Positionin­g System (GPS), NASA’s 1960s race to the moon, the nation’s ballistic missile defense system and multiple satellite deployment­s.

Its current work includes research to improve satellite solar arrays, developing electric propulsion for spacecraft and improving space micro-electronic­s. It is also working on NASA’s Artemis program to return astronauts to the moon.

The nonprofit’s primary customer and sponsor is the U.S. Space Force, but it also works with NASA and other civil agencies, as well as the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, the intelligen­ce community and internatio­nal partners. Among the private-sector companies it has worked with is SpaceX.

Aerospace said its $100million investment in the El Segundo campus would seek to expand its technical expertise and strengthen ties to the region’s workforce, talent base and universiti­es. Among the projects it will fund are the modernizat­ion of facilities that date to the 1960s and consolidat­ion of labs and other space.

 ?? JEFFREY CHILDS Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? observes an experiment inside a space radiation effects chamber on Aerospace’s El Segundo campus in 2010.
JEFFREY CHILDS Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times observes an experiment inside a space radiation effects chamber on Aerospace’s El Segundo campus in 2010.

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