Overview
Kennedy Space Center (KSC) and the adjacent Cape Canaveral Space Force Station (CCSFS) together form the busiest launch complex in the Western world. Located on Florida's Atlantic coast at 28.5°N latitude, the Cape has been America's primary launch site since the dawn of the Space Age. Every crewed American spaceflight — Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, Space Shuttle, Commercial Crew and Artemis — has launched from here.
Facility Details
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Location | Merritt Island / Cape Canaveral, Florida, USA |
| Coordinates | 28.5729°N, 80.6490°W |
| Operator | NASA (KSC), US Space Force (CCSFS), SpaceX, ULA, Blue Origin |
| First Launch | 24 July 1950 (Bumper V-2, from Cape Canaveral) |
| Orbital Inclination Range | 28.5°–57° (eastward over Atlantic) |
| Optimal For | ISS (51.6°), GTO, interplanetary trajectories |
| Total Historical Launches | 1,000+ orbital missions |
Active Launch Pads
LC-39A (KSC): The most famous pad in spaceflight history. Used for Apollo 11, numerous Shuttle missions, and now operated by SpaceX for Falcon 9, Falcon Heavy and eventually Starship east coast operations. This single pad supports 40+ launches per year.
LC-39B (KSC): NASA's pad for the Space Launch System. Launched Artemis I in November 2022. Configured as a "clean pad" to support multiple vehicle types.
SLC-40 (CCSFS): SpaceX's workhorse pad for Falcon 9 missions. Handles the majority of SpaceX's east coast launches — often multiple per week — including Starlink deployments, Commercial Crew and national security payloads.
SLC-41 (CCSFS): ULA's primary pad for Atlas V and the new Vulcan Centaur rocket.
LC-36 (CCSFS): Being rebuilt by Blue Origin for New Glenn launches.
Why Florida?
Cape Canaveral's location at 28.5°N provides two critical advantages. First, the eastward rotation of the Earth gives rockets launching east over the Atlantic a free velocity boost of ~410 m/s — reducing the fuel needed to reach orbit. Second, the open ocean to the east provides a safe downrange trajectory with no populated land beneath the flight path. The latitude is also close to the ISS orbital inclination (51.6°), making the Cape ideal for station resupply and crew missions.
History
The Cape has been a launch site since 1950, when a modified V-2 became the first rocket launched from the facility. It was the departure point for every Apollo lunar mission (1968–72), all 135 Space Shuttle flights (1981–2011), and now hosts the majority of global commercial launches via SpaceX. The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex attracts over 1.5 million visitors annually.