Michoud Assembly Facility

The Michoud Assembly Facility (MAF) is an 832-acre (1.3 sq mi; 3.4 km2) manufacturing complex owned by NASA in New Orleans East, a section of New Orleans, Louisiana, in the United States. Organizationally it is part of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, and is currently a multi-tenant complex to allow commercial and government contractors, as well as government agencies, to use the site.

Michoud Assembly Facility
Top to bottom, left to right: Aerial view of MAF in January 2020, the factory floor, Artemis 1 liquid oxygen tank in the South Vertical Assembly Building, and the entrance to the lobby and administration offices.
Location in Louisiana
Michoud Assembly Facility (the United States)
Built1940
LocationNew Orleans East
Coordinates30°01′30″N 89°54′54″W
IndustryAerospace
ProductsRockets stages and parts
Employees4,200
ArchitectAndrew Higgins
Buildings4
Area832 acres (337 ha)
Owner(s)NASA

MAF is one of the largest manufacturing plants in the world with 43 environmentally controlled acres174,000 m2 (1,870,000 sq ft)under one roof, and it employs more than 4,200 people. From September 1961 to the end of the Apollo program in December 1972 the site was utilized by Chrysler Corporation to build the first stages of the Saturn I and Saturn IB, later joined by Boeing Corporation to build the first stage of the Saturn V rockets. From September 5, 1973, to September 20, 2010, the factory was used for the construction of the Space Shuttle's external fuel tanks by Martin Marietta Corporation.

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