Ortega Spaceport

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Ortega Spaceport
Juan Alexander Sebastián Ortega Spaceport
Puerto espacial de Juan Alexander Sebastián Ortega
Named after Juan Ortega
Formation May 5, 1964; 60 years ago (1964-05-05)
Type AASA joint facility / R3A facility
Headquarters  Pacífico Sur
Location
Official language
English, Spanish
Owner AASA / R3A
Director
Samantha Bhakta
Budget
2.055 billion (2024)
Staff
14,777 (2024)

The Juan Alexander Sebastián Ortega Spaceport (Spanish: Puerto espacial de Juan Alexander Sebastián Ortega; also known as the Ortega Spaceport or Punta Salinas), located at Punta Salinas, Pacífico Sur, is one of the main facilities of the Royal Aeronautics and Aerospace Administration (R3A) and the primary launch center of Sierran spaceflight, research, and technology. It is one of the major joint space facilities of the Anglo-American Space Agency (AASA), an agency of the Conference of American States. It is named in honor of the late Juan Ortega, a Sierran civil engineer and economist, who was credited with introducing the Ortega efficiency. The Ortega Spaceport consists of over 640 buildings, constructed throughout approximately 11,520 acres (18 sq mi). The spaceport includes two airports, astronaut training and housing facilities, space vehicle manufacturing facilities, and a visitor center. Beginning with the Orion program, the Ortega Spaceport has been the primary launch control center for R3A's manned and unmanned missions. It is also the site of private multi-user launches with civil and commercial entities such as Overstars.

The Spaceport traces its origins to the Sierran Royal Air Force, which had established base operations along the eastern coast of Pacífico Sur in the 1950s. In a bid to drive economic development in Bajaría, Punta Salinas was selected as a candidate for R3A's plans to expand its footprint and space program with additional facilities across the Kingdom. R3A had two main facilities: Vandenberg Space Center in Kings and Pendleton Space Center in Laguna, although both locations were situated along the Pacific coast, facing westward, and located near major population centers. The location of Punta Salinas was chosen as it had open sea to the immediate north and east, and was located far closer to the equator compared to any part of Federal Sierra. Construction commenced in the late 1950s and was completed in 1964.

History

In 1959, during the height of the Space Race between the Western Bloc and Eastern Bloc, the R3A commissioned a special inquiry to assess its facilities and technological capabilities. The R3A, in its infancy, had its main operations centered at two locations, one in North County, San Diego (Pendleton Space Center), and the other in unincorporated Steinbeck County, Kings (Vandenberg Space Center). The former served as the center for flight control and core R3A operations, while the latter served as the center for space launches. Bolstered by parliamentary funding and direction by Prime Minister Alfred von Schliefen, R3A director Yogi Campos created the Space Research Task Force, and selected Trent Swift to lead the group. Swift and the task force's engineers identified, scoped, researched, and evaluated potential candidate sites for future R3A facilities of various uses, including a potential replacement for the Vandenberg Space Center as the primary space launch site. Punta Salinas, a peninsula along the eastern coast of Pacífico Sur, was identified as a strong candidate for R3A facilities and appeared on the task force's shortlist of Vandenberg's replacement.

Facilities

Launches

Personnel and training

Research

See also