The centre is based in the military village of Noginsk-9 () about a kilometre to the south-west of the village of Dubrovo near
Noginsk in
Moscow Oblast. It was previously known as TsKKP (Цккп) from meaning 'centre for space monitoring'. The idea of a space monitoring system originated in 1963 and the design was agreed upon in 1965. From the beginning it included civilian astronomical stations run by the
Soviet Academy of Sciences. The system needed to detect, identify and track satellites and create a satellite catalogue. The first satellite detection system consisted of eight
Dnestr radars, four at
Mishelevka in Siberia and four at
Balkhash in the Kazakh SSR which provided information for the
Istrebitel Sputnikov anti-satellite system. Construction on the centre began in 1965 and in 1968 a 5E51 computer was installed. The first part of the centre was placed on alert in 1970 and became operational in 1972, as part of the
Soviet Air Defences. In 1974 plans to link up the space surveillance centre with the missile warning centre and missile defence radars were realised. There were several problems with this. One significant issue was that they used different co-ordinate systems. A drawback of linking the early warning radars to the space surveillance centre was that it caused data on thousands of routine objects to be sent to the centre, overwhelming it with data. To counter this, a programme called "Kosmos" was implemented. This programme asked the radar stations only to send information on requested objects and launches rather than everything they identified. One concern raised with "Kosmos" was that it took the radar stations two to three minutes to do this, which disrupted their tracking of ballistic missiles. It was important that the system concentrated on the
military satellites of hostile countries and filtered these out from the noise of the wider space environment. The early warning radars could only cover satellites in low earth orbits. In the 1980s more US military satellites were placed in
geosynchronous orbits. This required specialised equipment, such as Krona and Okno, which could analyse satellites at that height. In the late 1980s the centre received a new building housing an
Elbrus-2 computer. Later a new network based on the Elbrus-90 Microcomputer was installed. The space monitoring centre was awarded the Soviet Minister of Defence Pennant for Courage and Military Valour. In 2003 a notification system for detecting "special spacecraft" passing over the country was implemented. ==Catalogue==