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Ars Technica Jun 3, 2026 at 10:00 Big Tech Rising Hot

How long will it take to rebuild Blue Origin's launch pad? We asked some SpaceX vets.

"Everyone is in a place where it’s no fun to be there."

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By Eric Berger Original source
How long will it take to rebuild Blue Origin's launch pad? We asked some SpaceX vets.

A former NASA engineer named John Muratore sat on console as launch director in early September 2016 as propellant flowed onto a Falcon 9 rocket in Florida. Ahead of a planned launch two days later, SpaceX was preparing for a static fire test of the vehicle. Then, all of a sudden, the rocket exploded. "It came out of nowhere, and it was really violent," Muratore said. This fireball resulted in the destruction of the rocket, much of its launch site, and the AMOS-6 satellite already attached to the vehicle. Nearly a decade later, on May 28, Blue Origin conducted a static fire test of a new rocket, with its larger New Glenn vehicle a few miles down the Florida coast. The company had gotten further into its test, reaching engine ignition, before its rocket also exploded. Read full article Comments

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Jun 3, 2026 at 10:00 Ars Technica

How long will it take to rebuild Blue Origin's launch pad? We asked some SpaceX vets.

"Everyone is in a place where it’s no fun to be there."

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