

2.5miles
(Various)

Cape Canaveral and adjacent Merritt Island on Florida's Atlantic coast are home to the USA's Eastern Range, the most active rocket range and spaceport in the country. The Eastern Range hosts two groundside operators: the military Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and the civilian Kennedy Space Center. Between them are dozens of launch pads, with several currently in active service and more in planning for activation.
List
Key
Kennedy Space Center
Kennedy Space Center, operated by NASA, has two launch complexes on Merritt Island comprising three pads—two active (with one under lease) and one inactive. From 1967 to 1975, it was the site of 13 Saturn V launches, three crewed Skylab flights and the Apollo–Soyuz; all Space Shuttle flights from 1981 to 2011, and one Ares 1-X flight in 2009. Since 2017, SpaceX uses Launch Complex 39A to launch their launch vehicles.
| Site | Status | Tenant | Uses | Notable Launches | Coordinates |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Launch Complex 39A | Active | SpaceX | Current: Falcon 9, Falcon Heavy Future: Starship Retired: Saturn V, Space Shuttle Cancelled: Ares V The launch site of all six crewed lunar landing missions of the Apollo Program. |
Apollo 4, Apollo 8, Apollo 11, Apollo 13, Apollo 17, Skylab, STS-1, STS-7, STS-71, STS-88, STS-107, STS-135, Falcon Heavy test flight, Crew Dragon Demo-2, Inspiration4, Psyche, Europa Clipper | 28°36′30.2″N 80°36′15.6″W / 28.608389°N 80.604333°W / 28.608389; -80.604333 (LC-39A) |
| Launch Complex 39B | Active[1] | NASA[a] | Current: Space Launch System Retired: Saturn V, Saturn IB, Space Shuttle, Ares I-X Cancelled: Ares I, OmegA The launch site of the Challenger disaster. |
Apollo 10, Skylab 2, Skylab 3, Skylab 4, Apollo-Soyuz, STS-51L, STS-34, STS-31, STS-93, Artemis I | 28°37′38″N 80°37′15″W / 28.62722°N 80.62083°W / 28.62722; -80.62083 (LC-39B) |
| Launch Complex 39C | Unbuilt | Located within LC-39B. It was intended to be used for small-lift launch vehicles and as a general multipurpose launch site.[2] Abandoned in 2016 in favor of building LC-48.[3] | 28°37′32.462″N 80°37′5.12″W / 28.62568389°N 80.6180889°W / 28.62568389; -80.6180889 (LC-39C) | ||
| Launch Complex 48 | Inactive | LC-48 is designed as a "clean pad" (a reconfigurable facility with no permanent structures) to support various small-lift launch vehicles. It is awaiting its first customer. | 28°35′55″N 80°35′20.8″W / 28.59861°N 80.589111°W / 28.59861; -80.589111 (LC-48) | ||
| Launch Complex 49 | Unbuilt | Cancelled: Starship[4] Plans were suspended in 2024.[5] |
28°38′28″N 80°38′47″W / 28.641121°N 80.6463749°W / 28.641121; -80.6463749 (LC-49) | ||
Cape Canaveral Space Force Station
Cape Canaveral Space Force Station (CCSFS), operated by Space Launch Delta 45 of the U.S. Space Force, was the site of all U.S. crewed launches before Apollo 8, as well as many other early Department of Defense (DoD) and NASA launches. For the DoD, it plays a secondary role to Vandenberg SFB in California, but is the launch site for many NASA uncrewed space probes, as those spacecraft are typically launched on United States Space Force launchers. Much of the support activity for CCSFS occurs at Patrick Space Force Base to the south, its reporting base.
Active sites
| Site | Tenant | Uses | Notable Launches | Coordinates |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Launch Complex 11 | Blue Origin[6] | Current: BE-4 test stand Retired: Atlas Part of larger site which includes LC-36. |
SCORE | 28°28′32″N 80°32′26″W / 28.47556°N 80.54056°W / 28.47556; -80.54056 (LC-11) |
| Launch Complex 12 | Current: Storage area for New Glenn Retired: Atlas, Atlas-Able, Atlas-Agena |
Mariner 2, Ranger 7, Mariner 4, Mariner 5 | 28°28′49″N 80°32′31″W / 28.48028°N 80.54194°W / 28.48028; -80.54194 (LC-12) | |
| Launch Complex 36 | Blue Origin[b][7] | Current: New Glenn[7] Retired: Atlas-Centaur, Atlas G, Atlas I, Atlas II, Atlas III Cancelled: Athena III[8] |
Blue Ring Pathfinder | 28°28′14″N 80°32′24″W / 28.47056°N 80.54000°W / 28.47056; -80.54000 (LC-36) |
| Space Launch Complex 40 | SpaceX | Current: Falcon 9 Retired: Titan IIIC, Titan 34D, Commercial Titan III, Titan IV |
OPS 0855, ATS-6, Mars Observer, Cassini-Huygens, Dragon C2+, DSCOVR, TESS, Beresheet, Euclid, Hera, SpaceX Crew-9 | 28°33′44″N 80°34′38″W / 28.562106°N 80.577180°W / 28.562106; -80.577180 (SLC-40 (LC-40)) |
| Space Launch Complex 41 | United Launch Alliance | Current: Atlas V, Vulcan Centaur Retired: Titan IIIC, Titan IIIE, Titan IV |
OPS 6911, Helios 1 & 2, Voyager 1 & 2, Viking 1 & 2, New Horizons, Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, Juno, Mars Science Laboratory, Mars 2020, Lucy, Peregrine Mission One, Boeing Crew Flight Test | 28°35′00″N 80°34′59″W / 28.58333°N 80.58306°W / 28.58333; -80.58306 (SLC-41 (LC-41)) |
| Space Launch Complex 46 | Space Florida[c][9][10] | Current: Dark Eagle Future: Rocket 4/5[11] Retired: Trident II,[12] Athena II, Athena I, Minotaur IV,[13] Orion Abort Test Booster, Rocket 3 SLC-46 is a clean pad.[14] |
Lunar Prospector, Ascent Abort-2 | 28°27′30″N 80°31′42″W / 28.45833°N 80.52833°W / 28.45833; -80.52833 (LC-46) |
Sites leased for future use
| Site | Tenant | Uses | Notable Launches | Coordinates |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Launch Complex 13 | Phantom Space and Vaya Space | Future: Daytona I, Dauntless[15] Retired: Atlas, Atlas Agena, Falcon 9 landings, Falcon Heavy landings[16] Site to be reconfigured as a clean pad. |
Mariner 3, Lunar Orbiter 1, Orbcomm OG2 M2 (landing), Falcon Heavy test flight (landing) | 28°29′09″N 80°32′40″W / 28.4859°N 80.5444°W / 28.4859; -80.5444 (LZ1 & 2 (LC-13)) |
| Launch Complex 14 | Stoke Space[17] | Future: Nova[15] Retired: Atlas, Mercury-Atlas, Atlas-Agena The site of all four crewed Mercury-Atlas launches used for Project Mercury. |
Mercury-Atlas 5, Mercury-Atlas 6, Mercury-Atlas 9, Gemini 8 ATV, Gemini 11 ATV | 28°29′28″N 80°32′49″W / 28.49111°N 80.54694°W / 28.49111; -80.54694 (LC-14) |
| Launch Complex 16 | Relativity Space[18] | Future: Terran R[19] Retired: Titan I, Titan II, Pershing 1a, Pershing II, Terran 1[19] |
28°30′06″N 80°33′06″W / 28.5017°N 80.5518°W / 28.5017; -80.5518 (LC-16) | |
| Space Launch Complex 20 | Firefly Aerospace[d][20] | Future: Alpha,[21] Eclipse[citation needed] Retired: Titan I, Titan IIIA, Starbird, Prospector, Aries, LCLV, Super Loki |
LES-1, LCS-1 | 28°30′44″N 80°33′24″W / 28.51222°N 80.55667°W / 28.51222; -80.55667 (LC-20) |
| Launch Complex 37A | SpaceX[22] | Future: Starship Cancelled: Saturn I, Saturn IB Pad has never been used. |
28°31′55″N 80°34′01″W / 28.531986°N 80.566821°W / 28.531986; -80.566821 (LC-37A) | |
| Space Launch Complex 37B | Future: Starship Retired: Saturn I, Saturn IB, Delta IV,[23] Delta IV Heavy[24] |
SA-5, AS-101, AS-105, Apollo 5, Exploration Flight Test-1, Parker Solar Probe |
Inactive and previously used sites
| Site | Status | Uses | Notable Launches | Coordinates |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Launch Complex A Launch Complex B Launch Complex C Launch Complex D |
Demolished | Retired: Matador LC-46 now sits on the site. |
||
| Launch Complex 1 | Inactive | Retired: Snark, Matador, Aerostat | 28°27′54″N 80°32′15″W / 28.46500°N 80.53750°W / 28.46500; -80.53750 (LC-1) | |
| Launch Complex 2 | Inactive | Retired: Snark, Matador, Aerostat | 28°27′56″N 80°32′13″W / 28.46556°N 80.53694°W / 28.46556; -80.53694 (LC-2) | |
| Launch Complex 3 | Inactive | Retired: Bumper-WAC, BOMARC, Polaris, X-17 | 28°27′57″N 80°32′13″W / 28.46583°N 80.53694°W / 28.46583; -80.53694 (LC-3) | |
| Launch Complex 4 | Inactive | Retired: BOMARC, Redstone, Matador, Jason, Draco | 28°28′00″N 80°32′08″W / 28.466667°N 80.535669°W / 28.466667; -80.535669 (LC-4) | |
| Launch Complex 4A | Inactive | Retired: BOMARC | ||
| Launch Complex 5 | Inactive | Retired: Jupiter-C, Redstone, Mercury-Redstone. The site of all six crewed and uncrewed Mercury-Redstone launches used for Project Mercury. Now part of the Cape Canaveral Space Force Museum. |
Pioneer 4, Mercury-Redstone 1, Mercury-Redstone 3, Mercury-Redstone 4 | 28°26′22″N 80°34′24″W / 28.43944°N 80.57333°W / 28.43944; -80.57333 (LC-5) |
| Launch Complex 6 | Inactive | Retired: Redstone, Jupiter Now part of the Cape Canaveral Space Force Museum. |
28°26′27″N 80°34′22″W / 28.44083°N 80.57278°W / 28.44083; -80.57278 (LC-6) | |
| Launch Complex 7 Launch Complex 8 |
Unbuilt | Would have joined LC-1/2/3/4. No assigned missile assigned to pad, though likely would launch missiles like Snark and Matador. Located at present site of Central Control Road.[25] | 28°27′47″N 80°32′25″W / 28.463061°N 80.540208°W / 28.463061; -80.540208 (LC-7 and LC-8) | |
| Launch Complex 9 | Inactive | Retired: Navaho | 28°27′07″N 80°33′35″W / 28.45194°N 80.55972°W / 28.45194; -80.55972 (LC-9) | |
| Launch Complex 10 | Demolished | Retired: Jason, Draco, Nike Tomahawk Demolished to make way for LC-31 and LC-32. |
28°27′07″N 80°33′25″W / 28.45194°N 80.55694°W / 28.45194; -80.55694 (LC-10) | |
| Launch Complex 15 | Inactive | Retired: Titan I, Titan II Cancelled: RS1[15] |
28°29′47″N 80°32′57″W / 28.4963°N 80.5493°W / 28.4963; -80.5493 (LC-15) | |
| Launch Complex 17A | Demolished | Retired: Thor, Thor-Able, Thor-Ablestar, Thor DSV-2, Delta I, Delta II | Pioneer 1, Explorer 6, OSO-1, Ariel 1, Mars Global Surveyor, Deep Space 1, Mars Climate Orbiter, Stardust, 2001 Mars Odyssey, Genesis, Mars Exploration Rover Spirit, Swift Observatory | 28°26′48″N 80°33′58″W / 28.44667°N 80.56611°W / 28.44667; -80.56611 (SLC-17) |
| Launch Complex 17B | Demolished | Retired: Thor, Thor-Ablestar, Thor DSV-2, Delta I, Delta II, Delta III | Courier 1B, Telstar 1, Syncom 2, NEAR Shoemaker, Mars Pathfinder, WMAP, Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity, Spitzer Space Telescope, MESSENGER, Deep Impact, Dawn, Kepler Space Telescope | |
| Launch Complex 18 | Inactive | Retired: Viking, Vanguard, Thor, Blue Scout Junior, Blue Scout | Vanguard TV-3, Vanguard 1, Vanguard 2, Vanguard 3, Mercury-Scout 1 | 28°26′57″N 80°33′44″W / 28.4493°N 80.5623°W / 28.4493; -80.5623 (LC-18) |
| Launch Complex 19 | Inactive | Retired: Titan I, Titan II GLV. The site of all ten crewed Titan II launches used for Project Gemini. |
Gemini 3, Gemini 4, Gemini 7, Gemini 6A, Gemini 8, Gemini 11, Gemini 12 | 28°30′24″N 80°33′15″W / 28.50667°N 80.55417°W / 28.50667; -80.55417 (LC-19) |
| Launch Complex 21 | Inactive | Retired: Goose, Mace | 28°27′38″N 80°32′24″W / 28.46056°N 80.54000°W / 28.46056; -80.54000 (LC-21) | |
| Launch Complex 22 | Inactive | Retired: Goose, Mace | 28°27′40″N 80°32′23″W / 28.4610°N 80.5398°W / 28.4610; -80.5398 (LC-22) | |
| Launch Complex 23 Launch Complex 24 |
Inactive | Retired: Triton, Snark Intended to have two pads and a single blockhouse, but only one pad was built and the blockhouse was never built. |
28°27′52″N 80°32′16″W / 28.464551°N 80.537816°W / 28.464551; -80.537816 (LC-23 and LC-24) | |
| Launch Complex 25 | Inactive | Retired: Polaris, Poseidon, Trident I | 28°25′55″N 80°34′37″W / 28.431988°N 80.576943°W / 28.431988; -80.576943 (LC-25) | |
| Launch Complex 26 | Inactive | Retired: Jupiter, Redstone Launch site of Explorer 1 - the first successful U.S. satellite. Now part of the Cape Canaveral Space Force Museum. |
Explorer 1 | 28°26′39″N 80°34′17″W / 28.44417°N 80.57139°W / 28.44417; -80.57139 (LC-26) |
| Launch Complex 27 | Unbuilt | Cancelled: G-38 Navaho Intended to have two pads. The Navaho program was cancelled before construction began. Located adjacent to LC-31 and LC-32. |
28°27′05″N 80°33′04″W / 28.451345°N 80.551200°W / 28.451345; -80.551200 (LC-27) | |
| Launch Complex 28 | Unbuilt | No known launch vehicle or missile was assigned to LC-28. Intended to have two pads and a single blockhouse.[26] | 28°29′53″N 80°32′58″W / 28.497930°N 80.549419°W / 28.497930; -80.549419 (LC-28) | |
| Launch Complex 29 | Inactive | Retired: Polaris[27] | 28°25′47″N 80°34′38″W / 28.42972°N 80.57722°W / 28.42972; -80.57722 (LC-29) | |
| Launch Complex 30A | Inactive | Retired: Pershing 1 | 28°26′22″N 80°34′50″W / 28.43945°N 80.58061°W / 28.43945; -80.58061 (LC-30) | |
| Launch Complex 30B | Inactive | Cancelled: Pershing 1 Pad has never been built. |
||
| Launch Complex 31 | Inactive | Retired: Minuteman, Pershing 1a Used as a burial vault for pieces of Space Shuttle Challenger. |
28°27′09″N 80°33′22″W / 28.45250°N 80.55611°W / 28.45250; -80.55611 (LC-31) | |
| Launch Complex 32 | Inactive | Retired: Minuteman | 28°27′09″N 80°33′22″W / 28.45250°N 80.55611°W / 28.45250; -80.55611 (LC-32) | |
| Launch Complex 33 | Unbuilt | Cancelled: Titan III X-20 Never built due to cancellation of the Dyna Soar program. SLC-37 now sits on the site. |
28°31′55″N 80°34′01″W / 28.531986°N 80.566821°W / 28.531986; -80.566821 (LC-33) | |
| Launch Complex 34 | Inactive | Retired: Saturn I, Saturn IB Site of the Apollo 1 fire. |
SA-1, AS-201, Apollo 7 | 28°31′19″N 80°33′41″W / 28.52194°N 80.56139°W / 28.52194; -80.56139 (LC-34) |
| Launch Complex 35 | Unbuilt | Cancelled: Navaho Not built due to the cancellation of the Navaho program. |
||
| Launch Complex 36A | Refurbished by Blue Origin, LLC | Retired: Atlas-Centaur,[8]Atlas II[28] | Surveyor 1, Mariner 7, Pioneer 10, Pioneer Venus Orbiter, Pioneer Venus Multiprobe | 28°28′14″N 80°32′24″W / 28.47056°N 80.54000°W / 28.47056; -80.54000 (LC-36) |
| Launch Complex 36B | Demolished | Retired: Atlas-Centaur, Atlas G, Atlas I, Atlas II, Atlas III | Surveyor 3, OAO-2, Mariner 6, Mariner 9, Pioneer 11, Mariner 10, SOHO | |
| Launch Complex 38 | Unbuilt | Cancelled: Atlas-Agena, Atlas-Centaur[29] Proposed for several Atlas variants, never had any specific location selected. |
N/A | |
| Launch Complex 42 | Unbuilt | Cancelled: Titan IIIC Proposed as a third pad to the Integrate-Transfer-Launch Complex. Cancelled because it would have been too close to LC-39A. |
28°33′59″N 80°36′13″W / 28.5662887°N 80.6034809°W / 28.5662887; -80.6034809 (LC-42) | |
| Launch Complex 43 | Demolished | Retired: Super Loki Demolished to make way for SLC-46. |
28°27′30″N 80°31′42″W / 28.45833°N 80.52833°W / 28.45833; -80.52833 (LC-43) | |
| Launch Complex 44 | Demolished | Retired: Dragon[30] Demolished to make way for the submarine facility at Port Canaveral. |
28°25′02″N 80°35′45″W / 28.41722°N 80.59583°W / 28.41722; -80.59583 (LC-44) | |
| Launch Complex 45 | Demolished | Cancelled: Roland Construction plans scrapped before any missiles were launched. LC-46 now sits on the site. |
28°27′30″N 80°31′42″W / 28.45833°N 80.52833°W / 28.45833; -80.52833 (LC-45) | |
| Launch Complex 47 | Inactive | Retired: Sounding Rockets, Super Loki, Super Loki Lite Star, LOFT-1[31] | 28°32′57″N 80°34′03″W / 28.549123°N 80.5674339°W / 28.549123; -80.5674339 (LC-47) |
Other sites
| Site | Status | Uses | Coordinates |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atlantic Missile Range drop zone | Inactive | Retired: High Virgo, Bold Orion, Hound Dog, Skybolt | |
| Grand Turk Auxiliary AFB, Grand Turk Island drop zone | Inactive | Retired: Arcas (All-Purpose Rocket for Collecting Atmospheric Soundings) | |
| Mobile Launch Area | Inactive | Retired: Lark, Matador, Snark[32] | |
| Eastern SLBM Launch Area | Active | Current: Trident II Retired: Polaris, Poseidon, Trident |
|
| Shuttle Landing Facility | Active | Current: X-37B landings Retired: Space Shuttle landings, Pegasus |
28°36′54″N 80°41′40″W / 28.615°N 80.6945°W / 28.615; -80.6945 (Shuttle Landing Facility) |
| Cape Canaveral Space Force Station Skid Strip | Active | Current: Pegasus XL Retired: Navaho, Pegasus |
28°28′05″N 80°34′01″W / 28.468°N 80.567°W / 28.468; -80.567 (Cape Canaveral Space Force Station Skid Strip) |
| Patrick Space Force Base | Inactive | Retired: Matador |
See also
Notes
- ^ Also the owner of the pad.
- ^ Subtenant; tenant is Space Florida.
- ^ Acts as a middleman tenant. Subtenants include Astra Space.
- ^ Subtenant; tenant is Space Florida. Eclipse will also be operated in conjunction with Northrop Grumman.
References
- ^ Bergeron, Julia (13 July 2018). "The most recent version of the CCAFS map (Nov 2017) has made it into our history center for reference. It exciting to see the Commercial Partner landmarks mixed in with space history.pic.twitter.com/ChVhnEl1AY". Twitter.
- ^ NASA (2015). "New Launch Pad will Enable Smaller Companies to Develop and Launch Rockets from Kennedy". NASA. Archived from the original on 20 July 2015. Retrieved 18 July 2015.
- ^ Anthony Iemole (22 December 2020). "Kennedy Space Center Expands as Launch Complex 48 Opens for Operations".
- ^ "SpaceX wants NASA's LC-49 for Starship Super Heavy launches". spaceexplored.com.
- ^ Clark, Stephen (18 February 2024). "SpaceX wants to take over a Florida launch pad from rival ULA". Ars Technica. Retrieved 28 September 2024.
- ^ "NSSL Phase 3 Lane 1 Industry Day". Space and Missile Systems Center. 20 August 2024. Retrieved 25 October 2024.
- ^ a b "Coming to the Space Coast". Blue Origin. 15 September 2015. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 28 June 2016.
- ^ a b Craig Covault (27 October 2008). "Boeing Joins Commercial Athena III Program". Archived from the original on 12 August 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
- ^ Messier, Doug (11 February 2014). "ATK to Upgrade Space Florida's Launch Complex 46". Parabolic Arc. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
- ^ Wall, Mike (26 August 2017). "Converted Missile Launches Military Satellite to Track Spacecraft and Debris". Space.com. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
- ^ "Astra Announces Launch for Nasa from Cape Canaveral in January". 6 December 2021.
- ^ "Complex 46". robsv.com. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
- ^ "U.S. Air Force's ORS-5 Satellite To Launch on Minotaur 4". SpaceNews. 9 July 2015.
- ^ "Launch Complex 46 | Space Florida". www.spaceflorida.gov. Retrieved 29 May 2025.
- ^ a b c @TGMetsFan98 (7 March 2023). "The US Space Force and @SLDelta45 have newly allocated three launch pads to four companies: SLC-15 (former Titan pad) to ABL Space Systems; SLC-14 (former Atlas pad) to Stoke Space; SLC-13 to Phantom Space and Vaya Spac. Interestingly, SLC-13 is currently LZ-1 and 2" (Tweet). Retrieved 28 March 2023 – via Twitter.
- ^ Gruss, Mike (10 February 2015). "SpaceX Leases Florida Launch Pad for Falcon Landings". Spacenews. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
- ^ Pearlman, Robert Z. (10 March 2023). "Mercury re-rising: Stoke Space to balance past and future at historic Florida launch pad". Space. Archived from the original on 10 March 2023. Retrieved 12 June 2025.
- ^ Foust, Jeff (17 January 2019). "Relativity to build launch site at Cape Canaveral". SpaceNews. Retrieved 12 June 2025.
- ^ a b Foust, Jeff (13 April 2023). "Relativity shelves Terran 1 after one launch, redesigns Terran R". SpaceNews. Retrieved 12 June 2025.
- ^ "Launch Complex 20 | Space Florida". www.spaceflorida.gov. Retrieved 15 February 2025.
- ^ Davenport, Justin (12 September 2024). "Firefly preparing new launch pads in Virginia, Sweden for Alpha rocket". NASASpaceFlight.com. Archived from the original on 12 September 2024. Retrieved 12 June 2025.
- ^ Foust, Jeff (6 December 2025). "SpaceX gets approval to build Starship launch complex at Cape Canaveral". SpaceNews. Retrieved 4 January 2026.
- ^ "United Launch Alliance Successfully Launches GPS III Satellite for U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center". www.ulalaunch.com. Retrieved 28 September 2024.
- ^ Graham, William (9 April 2024). "Delta IV Heavy launches on final mission". NASASpaceFlight.com. Retrieved 28 September 2024.
- ^ "LAUNCH COMPLEX 7/8 FACT SHEET | Spaceline". Retrieved 17 July 2025.
- ^ "LAUNCH COMPLEX 28 FACT SHEET | Spaceline". Retrieved 16 July 2025.
- ^ "Launch Complex 29". Air Force Space and Missile Museum. Archived from the original on 7 April 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
- ^ Atkinson, Ian (11 September 2019). "Blue Origin continuing work on New Glenn launch complex, support facilities". NASASpaceFlight.com. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
- ^ "LAUNCH COMPLEX 38 FACT SHEET | Spaceline". Retrieved 13 July 2025.
- ^ "LAUNCH COMPLEX 44 FACT SHEET | Spaceline". Retrieved 13 July 2025.
- ^ "Cape Canaveral Space Force Museum". ccspacemuseum.org. Retrieved 28 September 2024.
- ^ "HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD, CAPE CANAVERAL AIR FORCE STATION, LAUNCH COMPLEX 34 OPERATIONS SUPPORT BUILDING" (PDF). National Aeronautic and Space Administration. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 December 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
External links
- Encyclopedia Astronautica entry
- Google Earth Merritt Island Tour