ESA Director General praises UK space innovation during SSTL’s Kepler Building unveiling
25 Jan 2012
ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain and Rt. Hon. David Willetts, Minister for Universities and Science, today unveiled a commemorative plaque marking the inauguration of Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd’s (SSTL) new state-of-the-art Kepler technical facility at an event attended by guests from the UK and European space sectors.
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From Left to Right: Matt Perkins, Rt. Hon. David Willetts, Minister for Universities and Science, Sir Martin Sweeting and ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain.
Credit: SSTL.
The European Space Agency (ESA) Director General and the Minister were accompanied by Sir Martin Sweeting and SSTL’s CEO Dr. Matt Perkins for a tour of the purpose-built facility in Guildford, Surrey where 14 Galileo programme satellite payloads and several SSTL spacecraft are currently under construction.
Jean-Jacques Dordain commented: “SSTL continues to demonstrate agility and innovation, two factors that are essential for competitiveness and growth. This new building will become the birthplace of many satellites and a cornerstone to an industry that the UK and Europe could be proud of.”
David Willetts said: “The continued success of SSTL is a clear sign that our space industry is thriving. This impressive, high-tech new facility is already manufacturing some of the most advanced satellites in the world, boosting growth and helping the UK stay ahead of the game in space technology.”
The £10m purpose-built Kepler technical facility is already in full operation. The 14 Galileo programme payloads are under construction in a specially designed secure area and seven satellites, including TechDemoSat-1 and the three 1 metre resolution SSTL-300S1 satellites for the DMC3 constellation, are also at varying stages of completion for customers in the UK, Canada, Kazakhstan and Russia.
The 3,700sqm (40,000 sqft) Kepler Technical Facility building is co-located with SSTL’s headquarters building in Guildford, UK and will house approximately 40 permanent staff and anything up to 100 further project specific staff from across the company at peak test and integration periods. An integral part of the new facility are the world-class test halls that provide two 125 cubic metre walk-in thermal chambers, a seismic test platform, 15,000kg & 3,200kg monorail cranes, 10,000kg & 8,000kg gantry cranes, and reinforced floors, providing the greatest possible flexibility for integration and testing of both small and larger spacecraft.