on Launch Pad 0A. At left is a water tower to supply water for sound suppression. The Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport has three active orbital launch pads. rocket at Launch Pad 0B in September 2013 ahead of the launch of
LADEE. ===
Launch Pad 0A (LP-0A)=== Pad 0A was built in the 1990s for the
Conestoga rocket, which made its only flight in 1995. The launch tower was subsequently demolished in September 2008, and the pad has since been rebuilt for use by the
Northrop Grumman Antares. The pad modifications for Antares included the construction of a Horizontal Integration Facility (HIF) for launcher/payload mating and a wheeled transporter/erector that will "roll out and erect the rocket on its launch pad about 24 hours prior to launch". Preliminary estimates for rebuilding the pad indicated the cost should be no more than . By May 2015, that estimate had been revised down to and repairs were expected to be completed by September or October 2015 with the next planned launch in March 2016. On September 30, 2015, the spaceport announced repairs on pad 0A had been completed. Following the
Cygnus NG-19 launch in August 2023, Pad 0A was taken offline for the pad and facilities to be upgraded to support the new
Antares 330 rocket, which will have approximately twice the thrust as its predecessor, Antares 230+. The pad and transporter erector must accept the wider diameter of the new first stage, and the HIF must be lengthened. In addition, the complex is being upgraded to support the future Northrop Grumman
Eclipse alongside Firefly Aerospace, based on the Antares 330 but sporting a liquid-fueled second stage. For
sound suppression and cooling the pad during launches, there is a -tall water tower.
Launch Pad 0B (LP-0B) Pad 0B became operational in 1999, and was subsequently upgraded with the construction of a
mobile service tower, which was completed in 2004. It remains active, and is currently used by
Northrop Grumman Minotaur rockets. However, the Minotaur launch rate has decreased in recent years, leaving multi-year gaps between launches from Pad 0B. Pad 0B hosted the only Minotaur V launch, carrying the
LADEE lunar orbiter, in 2013. This was the first (and so far only) beyond-Earth mission to launch from Wallops.
Launch Pad 0C (LP-0C)/Launch Complex-2 (LC-2) In October 2018,
Rocket Lab announced that it had selected MARS as its second launch site, called
Rocket Lab Launch Complex-2. The company began construction in February 2019, together with the Virginia Commercial Space Flight Authority (Virginia Space). In December 2019, Rocket Lab said it had built and completed
Launch Complex-2 (LC-2), a new launch pad near Pad 0A, and was ready to support missions just 10 months later with the first launch scheduled for the third quarter of 2020. At a press conference on the same day at the NASA Wallops Flight Facility, the Space Test Program of the
United States Air Force (now
United States Space Force) was announced as the planned first customer for the Electron launch vehicle from LC-2. The mission was planned to launch a single research and development micro-satellite. This plan did not occur. For LC-2 missions, Electron rockets are fully assembled at an offsite integration facility before being trucked to the pad and installed on the launch mount. The first launch from LC-2 successfully occurred on January 24, 2023. An
Electron rocket carried three satellites to orbit in a mission named "Virginia is for Launch Lovers", the launch title referencing Virginia's well-known tourism slogan "
Virginia is for Lovers". Since then, LC-2 has seen several orbital Electron launches, including a handful of suborbital missions by the HASTE configuration of Electron.
Launch Pad 0D (LP-0D)/Launch Complex-3 (LC-3) In October 2023, construction of a new launch site between LP-0A and LP-0B was seen. The new launch site will be for
Rocket Lab's Neutron and will be named
Launch pad 0D (LP-0D). Rocket Lab will refer to LP-0D as Launch Complex 3 or LC-3. == Launch pad chart ==