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Launch Complex 36 (LC-36) is a launch complex located at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.[1][2] Located south of the Missile Row launch range, the complex originally consisted of two pads—designated LC-36A and LC-36B—to support the flights of Atlas launch vehicles equipped with a Centaur upper stage. From the 1960s to the 1980s, LC-36 was used by NASA and the United States Air Force to launch many payloads from the Atlas-Centaur and its derivatives, including the Pioneer, Surveyor, and Mariner probes.[3] During the late 1980s, LC-36B was also used to launch the Atlas G, and General Dynamics (and later Lockheed Martin) modified the two pads to support the larger Atlas I, Atlas II, and Atlas III throughout the 1990s and early 2000s.[4]

Following the Atlas program’s relocation to Space Launch Complex 41 (SLC-41) in 2005, LC-36 stood vacant until Blue Origin acquired the lease in 2015 for use by their heavy-lift New Glenn rocket.[5] The company made extensive modifications to the complex during this time, including demolishing 36A and 36B, rebuilding one large 36A in their place, as well as integrating the neighboring Launch Complex 11 (LC-11) into the facility. Following this large-scale renovation, the new era of LC-36 commenced with the maiden flight of New Glenn in January 2025. On May 28, 2026, a catastrophic failure during a static fire attempt of New Glenn resulted in significant damage to the pad.

Blue Origin plans to build a new LC-36B, even larger than the rebuilt LC-36A, capable of supporting the larger 9×4 variant of New Glenn.[6]

History

LC-36 was originally constructed by the US government in the early 1960s in order to launch the Atlas-Centaur rocket, with first launch in May 1962.[5]

LC-36A was previously the scene of the biggest on-pad explosion in Cape history when Atlas-Centaur AC-5 fell back onto the pad on March 2, 1965. The accident spurred NASA to complete work on LC-36B which had been abandoned when it was 90% finished.[7]

LC-36B was built near LC-36A “due to the Atlas-Centaur’s increasing flight rate – and low reliability early on.”[5]

The pad was modified by the operator of Atlas during the late 1980s to be able to launch the Atlas I, with first launch occurring in July 1990, and was subsequently modified two additional times during the 1990s to launch the Atlas II and Atlas III launch vehicles.[5] Atlas III made its sixth and final launch from LC-36 in 2005.

There was a total of 68 and 77 launches from pads 36A and 36B, respectively, while the US government operated the launch complex in the first five decades of spaceflight.[4]

Interregnum

The pad was unused from mid-2005 through 2015.

The legacy Atlas-Centaur umbilical towers of both pads were demolished in 2006.[8] The mobile service towers were both demolished in controlled explosions on June 16, 2007. Tower B was demolished at 13:59 GMT (09:59 EDT) and tower A followed twelve minutes later at 14:11 (10:11 EDT).[9]

In 2008, Aviation Week magazine reported that the U.S. Air Force committed to lease Launch Complex 36 to Space Florida for future use by the Athena III launch system,[10] but that program never moved forward.[11]

In March 2010, the USAF 45th Space Wing issued real property licenses to Space Florida for Space Launch Complexes 36 and 46 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.[12][13]

Moon Express leased the pad in February 2015 from Space Florida as a development and test site for its commercial lunar operations and its lunar lander flight test vehicles.[14]

In 2015, Blue Origin signed a long-term lease of launch site from Space Florida for launching Blue’s orbital rockets, after Space Florida had previously leased the facility from the USAF in 2010 in order to facilitate commercial use of the land and facilities since the Air Force no longer required use of the launch complex. Moon Express and Blue Origin shared LC-36, delineated into LC-36A and LC-36B respectively, until Moon Express announced its relocation to Launch Complexes 17 and 18 in 2016, allowing Blue Origin full use of the LC-36 facility. In early 2016, Blue intended to begin orbital launches by 2020,[15] as of 2019 they are expected to begin from LC-36 no earlier than 2024,[5] although the launch finally occurred on 16 January 2025.

Blue Origin

On September 15, 2015, Blue Origin announced it would use Launch Complex 36 for launches of its orbital launch vehicle later in the decade.[16][17][18] Blue had the lease in place for Launch Complex 36 by late 2015[15] from the Florida state space agency, Space Florida, and will manufacture their new BE-4-powered orbital launch vehicle at the nearby Exploration Park, also a part of the Space Florida land complex.[5]

A satellite view of Launch Complex 36 in 2023, following reconstruction. Also visible are LC-12 and LC-13 to the north, and Complexes 1 through 4 to the southeast.

By October 2015, the pad design and configuration was not yet publicly known.[4] Blue broke ground for the facility to initiate construction activity on the site in June 2016.[19]

By March 2016, the first launch of the Blue orbital launch vehicle New Glenn was estimated to be no earlier than 2020[15] and that target date had not changed by the time high-level specifications for the new launcher were unveiled in September 2016,[20] nor by the time construction of the launch site was well underway in September 2018.[21] New Glenn will be a very large 7.0-meter (23 ft)-diameter vehicle. The first stage will be powered by seven BE-4 methane/oxygen engines producing 17.1 meganewtons (3,850,000 lbf) total thrust at launch. The first stage will be reusable and is designed to land vertically.[20]

Blue has also leased the adjacent land—formerly known as LC-11—to use as a ground-based rocket engine test facility. Construction of the new launch complex and engine test facility was still underway in September 2018.[21] In addition to LC-11, Blue also leased LC-12 to the north, which has been in use as a storage site for various hardware surrounding New Glenn.[22]

Although Blue has been publicly quiet about the status of the launch complex construction, high-resolution aerial photography released after Hurricane Dorian in September 2019 showed that facility foundation work is in place—including for the horizontal integration facility, the launch service structure, lightning tower, and water tower—and above-ground steel construction has commenced. In September 2019, the propellant tank farm was in the process of being installed.[5]

During a static fire attempt of New Glenn on May 28, 2026, in preparation for NG-4, large flashes and explosions were visible at the aft end of the booster, before it suffered a structural collapse and exploded.[23] Significant damage was recorded to the launchpad.[24]

Launch statistics

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4km
2.5miles
28
28
28 LC-29
28 LC-29
27
27
27 LC-25
27 LC-25
26
26
26 LC-30
26 LC-30
25
25
25 LC-5 and LC-6
25 LC-5 and LC-6
24
24
24 LC-26
24 LC-26
23
23
23 SLC-17
23 SLC-17
22
22
22 LC-18
22 LC-18
21
21 LC-31 and LC-32
21 LC-31 and LC-32
20
20
20 LC-21 and LC-22
20 LC-21 and LC-22
19
19 SLC-46
(Various)
19 SLC-46
19 SLC-46
18
18
18 LC-1, LC-2, LC-3, and LC-4
18 LC-1, LC-2, LC-3, and LC-4
17
17 LC-36
(New Glenn)
17 LC-36
17 LC-36
16
16
16 LC-11
16 LC-11
15
15
15 LC-12
15 LC-12
14
14 LC-13
(FH
landings)
14 LC-13 (LZ-2)
14 LC-13 (LZ-2)
13
13
13 LC-14
13 LC-14
12
12
12 LC-15
12 LC-15
11
11
11 LC-16
11 LC-16
10
10
10 LC-19
10 LC-19
9
9 SLC-20
9 SLC-20
8
8 LC-34
8 LC-34
7
7 SLC-37
7 SLC-37
6
6 LC-47
6 LC-47
5
5 SLC-40 (Falcon 9)
5 SLC-40
5 SLC-40
4
4 SLC-41
(Atlas, Vulcan)
4 SLC-41
4 SLC-41
3
3 LC-48
3 LC-48
2
2 LC-39A (F9, FH)
2 LC-39A
2 LC-39A
1
1 LC-39B (SLS)
1 LC-39B
1 LC-39B
   

  Active pads
  Active pads not used for launches
  Inactive leased pads
  Inactive unleased pads


LC-36A

1
2
3
4
5
6
’62
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
2025

Atlas-Centaur

All flights operated by NASA.

No. Date Time (UTC) Launch vehicle Configuration Payload Result Remarks
1 8 May 1962 19:49 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-A Suborbital test Failure Maiden flight of the Centaur upper stage and first launch from LC-36. Insulation panel for the Centaur detached prematurely, leading to vehicle breakup 54 seconds after launch.
2 27 November 1963 19:03 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-B Orbital test Success First successful launch and orbital launch from LC-36. First use of a cryogenic engine in space.
3 30 June 1964 14:04 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-C Orbital test Failure Hydraulics pump failure led to premature shutdown of RL10s on Centaur and failure to reach orbit.
4 11 December 1964 14:25 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-C Surveyor mass simulator Partial failure Flaw in Centaur ullage motor prevented engine restart from parking orbit.
5 2 March 1965 13:25 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-C Surveyor SD-1 Failure Mass simulator for a Surveyor lunar lander. Booster valves accidentally closed 2 seconds after launch, leading to premature engine cutoff and rocket falling back onto pad. Damage to pad forced resumption of construction and activation of LC-39B.
6 30 May 1966 14:41 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-D Surveyor 1 Success Part of the Surveyor program, aiming to land on the Moon in anticipation for future crewed landings. First Atlas Centaur flight with a live payload and first launch from LC-36A since the pad explosion. First American spacecraft to land on the Moon.
7 20 September 1966 12:32 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-D Surveyor 2 Success Part of the Surveyor program, aiming to land on the Moon in anticipation for future crewed landings. Launch was a success, but payload failed en route to destination.
8 14 July 1967 11:53 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-D Surveyor 4 Success Part of the Surveyor program, aiming to land on the Moon in anticipation for future crewed landings. Launch was a success, but payload crashed on the lunar surface. Final Atlas LV launch from LC-36.
9 7 January 1968 06:30 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Surveyor 7 Success Part of the Surveyor program, aiming to land on the Moon in anticipation for future crewed landings. Final flight of the Surveyor program.
10 10 August 1968 22:33 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D ATS-4 Partial failure Part of the Applications Technology Satellites, designed to go to geosynchronous orbit. Oxidizer leak caused failure of engine restart, stranding payload in parking orbit.
11 25 February 1969 01:29 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Mariner 6 Success Part of the Mariner program, aiming at exploring Mars. First launch from LC-36 placing payload in a heliocentric orbit.
12 12 August 1969 11:01 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D ATS-5 Success Part of the Applications Technology Satellites, designed to go to geosynchronous orbit.
13 26 January 1971 00:36 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Intelsat IV F2 Success First commercial launch from LC-36.
14 9 May 1971 01:11 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Mariner 8 Failure Part of the Mariner program, aiming at exploring Mars. Damaged circuitry in Centaur led to loss of control and premature engine shutdown 365 seconds after launch.
15 20 December 1971 01:10 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Intelsat IV F3 Success
16 3 March 1972 01:49 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Pioneer 10 Success Part of the Pioneer program, aimed at exploring Jupiter. First spacecraft to reach the outer solar system, first spacecraft to visit Jupiter, and first spacecraft to reach escape velocity of the Sun.
17 23 August 1973 22:57 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1A Intelsat IV F7 Success
18 20 February 1975 23:35 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1A Intelsat IV F6 Failure Improper separation of lanyard during staging led to programming reset, causing an erroneous flight path and engaging range safety protocols 413 seconds after launch.
19 22 May 1975 22:04 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1A Intelsat IV F1 Success
20 13 May 1976 22:28 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Comstar D1 Success
21 26 May 1977 21:47 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat IVA F4 Success
22 30 September 1977 01:02 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat IVA F5 Failure Gas generator leak led to fire in thrust section during ascent, leading to RSO protocols 55 seconds after launch.
23 9 February 1978 21:17 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR FLTSATCOM-1 Success Part of the Fleet Satellite Communications System for the United States Navy. First military launch from an Atlas-Centaur and first military launch from LC-36.
24 20 May 1978 13:13 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Pioneer Venus Orbiter Success Part of the Pioneer program, aimed at exploring Venus. First American spacecraft to enter Venus’s orbit.
25 8 August 1978 07:33 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Pioneer Venus Multiprobe Success Part of the Pioneer program, aimed at exploring Venus. First American spacecraft to enter Venus’s atmosphere. Final mission of the Pioneer program.
26 4 May 1979 18:57 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR FLTSATCOM-2 Success Part of the Fleet Satellite Communications System for the United States Navy.
27 18 January 1980 01:26 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR FLTSATCOM-3 Success Part of the Fleet Satellite Communications System for the United States Navy.
28 31 October 1980 03:54 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR FLTSATCOM-4 Success Part of the Fleet Satellite Communications System for the United States Navy.
29 21 February 1981 23:23 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Comstar D4 Success
30 6 August 1981 01:16 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR FLTSATCOM-5 Partial failure Part of the Fleet Satellite Communications System for the United States Navy. Fairing collapsed during ascent, damaging the spacecraft.
31 5 March 1982 00:23 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V -504 Success
32 19 May 1983 22:26 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V -506 Success Final flight of the Atlas SLV.

Atlas II

All flights before 1994 operated by General Dynamics, from 1994 to January 1995 by Martin Marietta, and since April 1995 by Lockheed Martin.

No. Date Time (UTC) Launch vehicle Configuration Payload Result Remarks
33 11 February 1992 00:41 Atlas II Atlas II USA-78 (DSCS IIIB-14) Success First launch of the Atlas II from LC-36A.
34 2 July 1992 21:54 Atlas II Atlas II USA-82 (DSCS IIIB-12) Success
35 19 July 1993 22:04 Atlas II Atlas II USA-93 (DSCS IIIB-9) Success
36 28 November 1993 23:40 Atlas II Atlas II USA-97 (DSCS IIIB-10) Success
37 3 August 1994 23:57 Atlas II Atlas IIA DBS-2 Success First Atlas IIA launch from LC-36A.
38 29 November 1994 10:21 Atlas II Atlas IIA Orion 1 Success
39 29 January 1995 01:25 Atlas II Atlas II USA-104 (UHF F4) Success
40 7 April 1995 23:47 Atlas II Atlas IIA AMSC-1 Success
41 31 May 1995 15:27 Atlas II Atlas II USA-111 (UHF F5) Success
42 31 July 1995 23:30 Atlas II Atlas IIA USA-113 (DSCS IIIB-7) Success
43 22 October 1995 08:00 Atlas II Atlas II USA-114 (UHF F4) Success
44 15 December 1995 00:23 Atlas II Atlas IIA Galaxy 3R Success
45 3 April 1996 23:01 Atlas II Atlas IIA Inmarsat 3-F1 Success
46 25 July 1996 12:42 Atlas II Atlas II USA-127 (UHF F7) Success
47 21 November 1996 20:47 Atlas II Atlas IIA Hot Bird 2 Success
48 8 March 1997 06:01 Atlas II Atlas IIA Tempo 2 Success
49 4 September 1997 12:03 Atlas II Atlas IIAS AMC-3 Success First Atlas IIAS launch from LC-36A.
50 25 October 1997 00:46 Atlas II Atlas IIA USA-135 (DSCS IIIB-13) Success
51 29 January 1998 18:37 Atlas II Atlas IIA NROL-5 Success NRO launch. SDS satellite, also known as USA-137. First launch from LC-36 acknowledged by the National Reconnaissance Office.
52 16 March 1998 21:32 Atlas II Atlas II USA-138 (UHF F8) Success Final flight of the baseline Atlas II.
53 18 June 1998 22:48 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Intelsat 805 Success
54 20 October 1998 07:19 Atlas II Atlas IIA USA-140 (UHF F9 Success
55 16 February 1999 01:45 Atlas II Atlas IIAS JCSAT-6 Success
56 12 April 1999 22:50 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Eutelsat W3 Success
57 23 September 1999 06:02 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Echostar 5 Success
58 21 January 2000 01:03 Atlas II Atlas IIA USA-148 (DSCS IIIB-8) Success
59 3 May 2000 07:07 Atlas II Atlas IIA GOES-11 Success Launched as GOES-L. Part of the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites system of satellites.
60 30 June 2000 12:56 Atlas II Atlas IIA TDRS-8 Success Launched as TDRS-H. Part of the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System. First TDRS launch from LC-36, and first unmanned TDRS launch.
61 20 October 2000 00:40 Atlas II Atlas IIA USA-153 (DSCS IIIB-11) Success
62 6 December 2000 02:47 Atlas II Atlas IIAS NROL-10 Success NRO launch. SDS satellite, also known as USA-155.
63 23 July 2001 07:23 Atlas II Atlas IIA GOES-12 Success Launched as GOES-M. Part of the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites system of satellites.
64 8 March 2002 22:59 Atlas II Atlas IIA TDRS-9 Success Launched as TDRS-I. Part of the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System.
65 18 September 2002 22:04 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Hispasat 1D Success
66 5 December 2002 02:42 Atlas II Atlas IIA TDRS-10 Success Launched as TDRS-J. Part of the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System. Final flight of the Atlas IIA.
67 5 February 2004 23:46 Atlas II Atlas IIAS AMC-10 Success
68 16 April 2004 00:45 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Superbird 6 Success Launch was a success, but gravitational perturbations by the Moon caused a lower than expected perigee and permanent damage to satellite.
69 31 August 2004 23:17 Atlas II Atlas IIAS NROL-1 Success NRO launch. SDS satellite, also known as USA-179. Final flight of the Atlas II, and final flight from LC-36A prior to Blue Origin’s pad reconfiguration.

New Glenn

All flights operated by Blue Origin.

No. Date Time (UTC) Launch vehicle Booster Payload Result Remarks
70 16 January 2025 07:03 New Glenn 7×2 1 Blue Ring Pathfinder Success Maiden flight of New Glenn and first orbital launch for Blue Origin. First launch from LC-36 following complex rebuilding. Carried a prototype Blue Ring spacecraft. Originally supposed to fly the two ESCAPADE probes, but payloads switched following development issues with rocket. Booster landing failed during entry burn.
71 13 November 2025 20:55 New Glenn 7×2 2-1 ESCAPADE Success Part of the SIMPLEx program, two orbiters designed to study the magnetosphere and atmosphere of Mars. First New Glenn launch into heliocentric orbit, and first successful booster landing by a non-SpaceX launch vehicle.
72 19 April 2026 11:25 New Glenn 7×2 2-2 BlueBird 7 Failure First commercial launch for New Glenn, and first reflight of a non-SpaceX first stage, previously flown in 2025 as part of ESCAPADE. Second stage issue placed satellite into incorrect orbit and forced it to conduct a controlled reentry. Final launch from LC-36 before a pad explosion on May 28 severely damaged the pad and forced reconstruction.


LC-36B

1
2
3
4
5
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005

Atlas-Centaur and Atlas G

All flights operated by NASA.

No. Date Time (UTC) Launch vehicle Configuration Payload Result Remarks
1 11 August 1965 14:31 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-D Surveyor SD-2 Success Mass simulator for a Surveyor lunar lander. First launch from LC-39B. First fully successful flight of a Surveyor mass simulator.
2 8 April 1966 01:00 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-D Surveyor SD-3 Success Mass simulator for a Surveyor lunar lander. Centaur prematurely depleted ullage propellant, preventing engine restart.
3 26 October 1966 11:12 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-D Surveyor SD-4 Success Mass simulator for a Surveyor lunar lander. First ever restart of a cryogenic engine in orbit.
4 17 April 1967 07:05 Atlas-Centaur Atlas LV-3C /Centaur-D Surveyor 3 Success Part of the Surveyor program, aiming to land on the Moon in anticipation for future crewed landings. First launch of a live payload from LC-36B. First and only to date spacecraft to visited by astronauts on another celestial object, being visited by Apollo 12 in 1969 to demonstrate the feasibility of making a moonbase.
5 8 September 1967 07:57 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Surveyor 5 Success Part of the Surveyor program, aiming to land on the Moon in anticipation for future crewed landings. First Atlas SLV launch from LC-36.
6 7 November 1967 07:39 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Surveyor 6 Success Part of the Surveyor program, aiming to land on the Moon in anticipation for future crewed landings.
7 7 December 1968 08:40 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D OAO-2 Success Part of the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory series of space telescopes. First ever successful launch of a space telescope.
8 27 March 1969 22:22 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Mariner 7 Success Part of the Mariner program, aiming at exploring Mars.
9 30 November 1970 22:40 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D OAO-B Failure Part of the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory series of space telescopes. Payload fairings failed to separate, causing failure to reach orbit.
10 30 May 1971 22:23 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Mariner 9 Success Part of the Mariner program, aiming at exploring Mars. Became the first ever satellite to enter orbit of another planet.
11 23 January 1972 00:12 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Intelsat IV F4 Success
12 13 June 1972 21:53 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D Intelsat IV F5 Success
13 21 August 1972 10:28 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3C / Centaur-D OAO-3 Success Part of the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory series of space telescopes.
14 6 April 1973 02:11 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1A Pioneer 11 Success Part of the Pioneer program, aimed at exploring Jupiter and Saturn. First spacecraft to visit Saturn, and second spacecraft to reach solar escape velocity.
15 3 November 1973 05:45 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1A Mariner 10 Success Part of the Mariner program, aiming at exploring Venus and Mercury. First spacecraft to visit Mercury and first spacecraft to take pictures of Venus from space. Final mission of the Mariner program.
16 21 November 1974 23:43 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1A Intelsat IV F8 Success
17 26 September 1975 00:17 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat IVA F1 Success
18 29 January 1976 23:56 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat IVA F2 Success
19 22 July 1976 22:04 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Comstar D2 Success
20 12 August 1977 21:47 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR HEAO-1 Success Part of the HEAO Program, space telescopes designed to observe x-ray astronomy.
21 7 January 1978 00:15 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat IVA F3 Success
22 31 March 1978 23:36 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat IVA F6 Success
23 29 June 1978 22:24 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Comstar D3 Success
24 13 November 1978 05:24 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Einstein Observatory Success Part of the HEAO Program, space telescopes designed to observe x-ray astronomy.
25 20 September 1979 05:28 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR HEAO-3 Success Part of the HEAO Program, space telescopes designed to observe x-ray astronomy.
26 6 December 1980 23:31 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V F-2 Success
27 23 May 1981 22:42 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V F-1 Success
28 15 December 1981 23:35 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V F-3 Success
29 28 September 1982 23:17 Atlas-Centaur Atlas SLV-3D / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V -505 Success Final Atlas SLV launch from LC-36B.
30 9 June 1984 23:03 Atlas G Atlas G / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V -509 Failure Maiden flight of the Atlas G. Centaur LOX tank ruptured during coasting phase, leading to loss of rocket.
31 22 March 1985 23:55 Atlas G Atlas G / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V -510 Success
32 30 June 1985 00:44 Atlas G Atlas G / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V -511 Success
33 28 September 1985 23:17 Atlas G Atlas G / Centaur-D1AR Intelsat V -512 Success
34 5 December 1986 02:30 Atlas G Atlas G / Centaur-D1AR USA-20 (FLTSATCOM-7) Success Part of the Fleet Satellite Communications System for the United States Navy.
35 26 March 1987 21:22 Atlas G Atlas G / Centaur-D1AR FLTSATCOM-6 Failure Part of the Fleet Satellite Communications System for the United States Navy. Launched during a thunderstorm and was struck by lightning, damaging guidance and causing an erroneous pitch maneuver that led to vehicle breakup.
36 25 September 1989 08:56 Atlas G Atlas G / Centaur-D1AR USA-46 (FLTSATCOM-8) Success Part of the Fleet Satellite Communications System for the United States Navy. Final flight of the Atlas G.

Atlas I, II, and III

All flights before 1994 operated by General Dynamics, from 1994 to January 1995 by Martin Marietta, and since March 1995 by Lockheed Martin.

No. Date Time (UTC) Launch vehicle Configuration Payload Result Remarks
37 25 July 1990 19:21 Atlas I Atlas I CRRES Success Joint NASADoD satellite aimed at studying Earth’s magnetosphere. Maiden flight of the Atlas I.
38 18 April 1991 23:30 Atlas I Atlas I BS-3H Failure Frozen nitrogen formed a plug that caused failure of one RL10 during staging, activating RSO protocols 441 seconds after launch.
39 7 December 1991 22:47 Atlas II Atlas II Eutelsat 2F3 Success Maiden flight of the Atlas II.
40 14 March 1992 00:00 Atlas I Atlas I Galaxy 5 Success
41 10 June 1992 00:00 Atlas II Atlas IIA Intelsat K Success Maiden flight of the Atlas IIA.
42 22 August 1992 22:40 Atlas I Atlas I Galaxy 1R Failure Frozen nitrogen formed a plug that caused failure of one RL10 during staging, activating RSO protocols 470 seconds after launch.
43 25 March 1993 21:38 Atlas I Atlas I UHF F1 Failure Improper torque led to loss of thrust in sustainer engine, eventually causing payload to be placed in an unusable orbit.
44 3 September 1993 11:17 Atlas I Atlas I USA-95 (UHF F2) Success
45 16 December 1993 00:38 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Telstar 401 Success Maiden flight of the Atlas IIAS.
46 13 April 1994 06:04 Atlas I Atlas I GOES-8 Success Launched as GOES-I. Part of the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites system of satellites. First GOES launch on an Atlas rocket. First Atlas flight following Martin Marietta‘s purchase of General Dynamics‘ space division.
47 24 June 1994 13:50 Atlas I Atlas I USA-104 (UHF F3) Success
48 6 October 1994 06:35 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Intelsat 703 Success
49 10 January 1995 06:18 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Intelsat 704 Success First Atlas launch procured by International Launch Services.
50 22 March 1995 06:18 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Intelsat 705 Success First Altas launch following Lockheed and Martin Marietta‘s merging into Lockheed Martin.
51 23 May 1995 05:52 Atlas I Atlas I GOES-9 Success Launched as GOES-J. Part of the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites system of satellites.
52 29 August 1995 00:53 Atlas II Atlas IIAS JCSAT-3 Success
53 2 December 1995 08:08 Atlas II Atlas IIAS SOHO Success Part of the Horizon 2000 program, aimed at observing the Sun from the L1 Lagrange point. First launch for ESA from LC-36.
54 1 February 1996 01:15 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Palapa C1 Success
55 30 April 1996 04:31 Atlas I Atlas I BeppoSAX Success Space telescope aimed at detecting x-ray sources, helping detect gamma-ray burst sources. Partnership between the ASI and NIVR.
56 8 September 1996 21:49 Atlas II Atlas IIA GE-1 Success
57 18 December 1996 01:57 Atlas II Atlas IIA Inmarsat 3-F3 Success
58 17 February 1997 01:42 Atlas II Atlas IIAS JCSAT-4 Success
59 25 April 1997 05:49 Atlas I Atlas I GOES-10 Success Launched as GOES-K. Part of the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites system of satellites. Last flight of the Atlas I.
60 28 July 1997 01:15 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Superbird-C Success
61 5 October 1997 21:01 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Echostar 3 Success
62 8 December 1997 23:52 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Galaxy 8i Success
63 28 February 1998 00:21 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Intelsat 806 Success
64 9 October 1998 22:50 Atlas II Atlas IIA Hot Bird 5 Success
65 23 November 1999 04:06 Atlas II Atlas IIA USA-146 (UHF F10) Success
66 3 February 2000 23:30 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Hispasat 1C Success
67 23 May 2000 23:10 Atlas III Atlas IIIA Eutelsat W4 Success Maiden flight of the Atlas III, and first orbital Atlas flight without the stage and a half design of the core stage.
68 14 July 2000 05:21 Atlas II Atlas IIAS Echostar 6 Success
69 19 June 2001 04:41 Atlas II Atlas IIAS ICO F2 Success
70 11 October 2001 02:32 Atlas II Atlas IIAS NROL-12 Success NRO launch. SDS satellite, also known as USA-162.
71 21 February 2002 12:43 Atlas III Atlas IIIB Echostar 7 Success Maiden flight of the Atlas IIIB.
72 12 April 2003 00:47 Atlas III Atlas IIIB Asiasat 4 Success
73 18 December 2003 02:30 Atlas III Atlas IIIB UFO 11 Success
74 13 March 2004 05:40 Atlas III Atlas IIIA MBSAT-1 Success Final launch of the Atlas IIIA.
75 19 May 2004 22:22 Atlas II Atlas IIAS AMC-11 Success Final Atlas II launch from LC-36B.
76 3 February 2005 07:41 Atlas III Atlas IIIB NROL-23 Success NRO launch. Two Intruder satellites, sharing the designation USA-181. Final flight of the Atlas III, and final Atlas launch from LC-36. Final flight from LC-36 prior to Blue Origin’s pad reconfiguration. Most recent launch from LC-36B.


See also

References

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  12. ^ “Air Force licenses two launch complexes for commercial use”. Archived from the original on February 8, 2015. Retrieved March 15, 2010.
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  14. ^ Clark, Stephen (January 24, 2015). “Former Atlas launch pad gets a new tenant”. Spaceflight Now. Retrieved February 8, 2015.
  15. ^ a b c Boyle, Alan (March 5, 2016). “Jeff Bezos lifts curtain on Blue Origin rocket factory, lays out grand plan for space travel that spans hundreds of years”. GeekWire. Retrieved March 9, 2016.
  16. ^ Cofield, Calla (September 15, 2015). “Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin Will Launch Rockets and Spaceships from Florida”. Space.com. Retrieved September 15, 2015.
  17. ^ Foust, Jeff (September 15, 2015). “Bezos Not Concerned About Competition, Possible ULA Sale”. Space News. Retrieved September 16, 2015.
  18. ^ Harwood, William (September 17, 2015). “Jeff Bezos plans to boost humans into space from Cape Canaveral”. CBS News.
  19. ^ Cofield, Calla (June 28, 2016). “Blue Origin’s Rocket Factory Breaks Ground”. Space.com. Retrieved July 7, 2016.
  20. ^ a b Bergin, Chris (September 12, 2016). “Blue Origin introduce the New Glenn orbital LV”. NASASpaceFlight. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  21. ^ a b Burghardt, Thomas (20 September 2018). “Building on New Shepard, Blue Origin to pump a billion dollars into New Glenn readiness”. NASASpaceFlight.com. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  22. ^ “NSSL Phase 3 Lane 1 Industry Day”. Space and Missile Systems Center. 20 August 2024. Retrieved 25 October 2024.
  23. ^ Blue Origin [@blueorigin] (May 28, 2026). “We experienced an anomaly during today’s hotfire test. All personnel have been accounted for. We will provide updates as we learn more” (Tweet). Retrieved May 28, 2026 – via X (formerly Twitter).
  24. ^ “Blue Origin New Glenn rocket explodes on launch pad in Florida”. CBS News. 2026-05-28. Retrieved 2026-05-28.