Rosing incorporated Las Cumbres Observatory in 1993 with the goal of aiding universities, observatories, and individuals in the acquisition and improvement of telescopes, optics, and instrumentation. He also set the objective for the organization to build and implement a global telescope system. In 2005, Rosing established the global telescope version of Las Cumbres Observatory. LCO initially acquired the two Faulkes 2-meter telescopes.
Faulkes Telescope North (FTN) located at
Haleakala Observatory, on Maui, Hawaii, and
Faulkes Telescope South (FTS) at
Siding Spring Observatory (SSO), in eastern Australia. LCO also purchased the company that built the Faulkes telescopes, Telescope Technologies Limited of Liverpool, with the intent of installing additional 2-meter telescopes at different sites to form a robotically operated network. Over the next few years, Rosing and the LCO staff came to understand that a network composed of many smaller telescopes would provide greater observing capacity. The organization designed its own 1-meter telescope with a plan to locate several of these at each chosen site. An even smaller 40-centimeter telescope was also developed primarily for use in education projects. During 2012 and 2013, nine 1-meter telescopes were constructed and deployed to
McDonald Observatory at Fort Davis, Texas; Cerro Tololo Interamerican Observatory (CTIO) in Chile; South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO), near Sutherland, South Africa; and SSO in Australia. During 2015 and 2016, seven 40-centimeter telescopes were deployed to CTIO, Haleakala Observatory, SSO, and to
Teide Observatory on
Tenerife in the Canary Islands. After completion of the construction and installation of these telescopes, LCO began its transition to operating a global observatory. In 2013, a board of directors was established and a president was hired to lead the organization. Full science scheduling began on 1 May 2014, with the two 2-meter and nine 1-meter telescopes operating as a single, integrated, observatory. The 40-centimeter telescopes were added to this system as they were commissioned. The National Science Foundation made an award to LCO in 2016 through its Mid-Scale Innovations Program, purchasing access to the LCO network for all astronomers at U.S. institutions. The goal of this program is to prepare this community to carry out effective research following discoveries being made by current and future
time-domain astronomy surveys. ==Telescope network==