USSRC

U.S. Space & Rocket Center Receives Major Donation for New Skills Training Center

Space Camp, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary this week, will soon take another giant leap forward thanks to a major donation by Aviation Challenge graduate and Shift4 Founder/CEO Jared Isaacman. 

On June 17, U.S. Space & Rocket Center CEO Dr. Kimberly Robinson and Isaacman announced a $10 million gift for a new training facility at the Rocket Center to support Space Camp programs. 

“We have much to celebrate about our past, but today we are looking to our future for the next 40 years and we can do that because of partners who invest in our vision and mission, and we have such a partner in Jared and his crew,” Robinson said. 

The planned concept will be a 40,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art hangar-style building featuring space and aviation simulators, an aquatic center, a netted drone space, classrooms, and a challenge course designed for the training of future astronauts, pilots, and engineers. This gift is the largest single donation in the Rocket Center’s history and will allow the USSRC to bring many of Space Camp and Aviation Challenge’s immersive, scenario-themed activities under one roof. 

DSC 0494A highlight of the new facility will be the display of an L-39 Black Diamond plane, which Isaacman is also donating to the Rocket Center

Once operational, this new facility will extend water and other weather-dependent outdoor activities year-round, enabling Space Camp to increase the number of trainees that can attend each year outside of the summer season. 

Isaacman, an Aviation Challenge graduate, is an entrepreneur, philanthropist, accomplished civilian pilot, and commercial astronaut who holds several world records and has flown in over 100 air shows. In September 2021, he commanded Inspiration4, the world’s first all-civilian mission, to orbit, spending three days aboard a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft. 

Accompanying Isaacson at the presentation were his fellow crew members: mission specialist Chris Sembroski, senior analytics engineer for Lockheed Martin and a former Space Camp counselor; medical officer Hayley Arceneaux, a physician’s assistant at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital; and mission pilot Dr. Sian Proctor, a geoscience professor. 

The Inspiration4 mission, which carried the first pediatric cancer survivor, the youngest American to fly into orbit, and the first Black female pilot into space, raised over $250 million for St. Jude. The new building, the Inspiration4 Skills Training Center, will bear the name of the mission. 

“We showed that you can make progress for a better world tomorrow, which is what we hoped to accomplish in space, but also take care of some of the real hardships that we have here on the planet we love, like raising over $250 million for St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital,” said Isaacman. 

“We always said if we got this one right we’d open the door for so many more exciting missions to follow. And that’s exactly what’s going to happen. What you’re seeing here at Space camp is a lot of young minds that will someday go on those missions,” Issacman continued. “The Inspiration4 Skills Center is one step along that journey…Space Camp might be located in Huntsville, Alabama but it’s an asset for the entire nation.” 

“There’s no better place to expose our future leaders, innovators, and entrepreneurs than an institution here in Huntsville, Alabama that’s got a Space & Rocket Center…an aviation program, a robotics program, a cyber program–these are all the disciplines of tomorrow,” Isaacman said. 

Isaacman stated that $10 million is a great step in that direction, then presented a challenge to the state and the federal government to not only match that, but to exceed it: “It’s going to take so much more if we’re going to ensure that the United States is still leading the world with all these great new pioneering disciplines into the future just as we’ve done in the past.” 

Isaacman and the Inspiration4 crew also presented Space Camp with a signed flag bearing the mission emblem to be displayed in the new facility, noting that it was flown “past the International Space Station, past the Hubble Telescope, the farthest that humans have been in space for more than 20 years.” 

According to Robinson, this new training center will be “the cornerstone of all of our Space Camp programs into the future.” 

“From a business perspective, this is maybe one of the most exciting times in aerospace in the last three or four decades. The amount of capital that’s come into the industry to fuel really exciting innovative ideas over the last year exceeded I think the last ten years prior,” Isaacman stated. “Really, I think it’s a little bit of a wake-up call because we’re seeing things now that we never thought were possible outside of science fiction movies like rockets landing on ships.” 

“This isn’t necessarily exclusive to one company–this is within the power of our nation to do so. Let’s start fueling and funding a lot of new entrepreneurial businesses to tackle problems all across the whole aerospace spectrum.”

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