After striking a deal to lease space at the Port of Los Angeles and then scrapping that plan — twice — SpaceX has a new deal: to use a waterfront facility at the Port of Long Beach for the recovery of its rocket boosters.
The Long Beach Board of Harbor Commissioners on Monday approved the Hawthorne company's use of a 6 1/2-acre marine terminal, according to a statement from the Port of Long Beach. The site is to be used to dock the vessels that ferry used SpaceX first-stage rocket boosters back to shore and to offload equipment. SpaceX is set to take over the site Saturday.
The site was previously used for 20 years by Sea Launch, a satellite-launch company that blasted rockets to space from a modified, floating oil rig in the Pacific Ocean. Sea Launch was later acquired by a Russian firm, and its Port of Long Beach site has been vacant for more than a year, the port said in its statement. Before Sea Launch, the 6.5-acre site was a U.S. Navy complex.
Long Beach has a long and storied history of aerospace work, and Elon Musk-led SpaceX is poised to join a number of newer space companies with operations in the city.
Small-satellite launch firm Virgin Orbit builds rockets in a facility on the sprawling lot where McDonnell Douglas Corp., and later Boeing Co., once built C-17 cargo planes. Fellow small-satellite launch company Rocket Lab also has its headquarters and rocket manufacturing plant in Long Beach, as does 3-D-printed rocket company Relativity Space.
In 2018 and 2020, SpaceX made plans to lease a vacant site at the Port of Los Angeles to build its Starship Mars spaceship and rocket booster. But after getting approval both times from port and city officials, SpaceX changed its mind and withdrew from the agreement.
Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia said he doesn't think that will happen this time around and that SpaceX's new operations at the port will only add to the city's growing "space hub."
"We feel optimistic this will be a good fit for them," he said. "To have all these space companies here and the density is, I think, very unique and something that is exciting."
SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment.
SpaceX is building and testing its Starship craft in Boca Chica Village, Texas. The company recently won a NASA contract to ferry astronauts via Starship from lunar orbit to the surface of the moon.
SpaceX still rents a small parcel of land for storage at the Port of Los Angeles. The company previously did recovery operations of its rocket boosters and spacecraft at that port.