Blocks all stacked for NASA’s future Artemis tower at KSC
There’s still more than a year’s worth of work to do on NASA’s future Artemis launch tower at Kennedy Space Center, but all of the big pieces have been put in place.
The last of seven modular steel blocks that make up the bulk of the tower’s height was put into place on July 2 by the tower’s contractor Bechtel.
The block called Mod 10 brings it to 377 feet tall from the base structure.
“This achievement underscores our ongoing partnership with NASA and local unions, and the team’s steady progress toward safe delivery of this critical infrastructure,” the company said in an emailed statement.
Progress has been tracked on the company’s website with the latest addition dubbed “Reaching the Top.”
Mod 4 was the first of the seven blocks put in place on Jan. 3, growing the structure 272 feet in less than six months. Mod 10 will support the Crew Access Arm for ML-2, which is among the parts that have yet to be assembled before the company’s deadline of November 2026 for delivery to NASA.