Work on GeoEye-2 began in October 2007 when commercial imagery company
GeoEye selected
ITT Corporation to begin work on long lead-time items for the satellite camera system. In March 2010, an initial contract for construction of the spacecraft was awarded to
Lockheed Martin Space Systems, which previously built the
Ikonos imaging satellite. At the time, GeoEye-2 was planned for launch in late 2012. The spacecraft's
preliminary design review was completed in November 2010, while its
critical design review (CDR) was completed in June 2011. Lockheed Martin issued a contract to ITT Corporation in August 2010 to continue work on the camera system, The system was delivered to Lockheed Martin in April 2012, and was mated to the
satellite bus the following month.
DigitalGlobe agreed to purchase
GeoEye in July 2012, and finalized the merger in January 2013. At the time, each company had a satellite being prepared for launch:
WorldView-3 and
GeoEye-2. Because
WorldView-3 offered multiple
short-wavelength infrared channels in addition to the standard
panchromatic and multiwavelength channels, the company chose to proceed with its launch and to place
GeoEye-2 into storage. In July 2014, DigitalGlobe announced that GeoEye-2 had been renamed to
WorldView-4 to better match the company's branding, and that, due to a projected increase in product demand, the spacecraft's launch had been scheduled for mid-2016. The total cost of the spacecraft, including insurance and launch, is estimated at US$835 million. The first public image from WorldView-4 was taken on 26 November 2016 and released on 2 December 2016. WorldView-4 was insured against satellite failure, and in spring 2019 the company owning the satellite,
Maxar Technologies, which had acquired DigitalGlobe in 2017, announced that they had received the full US$183 million insurance payment. == Launch ==