Kennedy Space Center, one of NASA’s 10 field centers and from 1968 its primary launch center for human spaceflight, located on Merritt Island, Florida. It encompasses 144,000 acres (58, 275 hectares) and includes among its facilities the Vehicle Assembly Building and the Launch Control Center as well as a visitor complex.
In 1962, NASA acquired more than 200 square miles (518 square km) of land on Merritt Island to facilitate the recently announced lunar program of operations. The preceding year, U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy had pledged to get the first American astronaut on the Moon by 1970. The area was originally known as Launch Operations Center, but the name was changed to honor Kennedy following his assassination in 1963.
Work immediately began on a new launch complex—Launch Complex 39. In addition, the Vehicle Assembly Building, for the construction of spacecrafts, was built by 1966. The first launch from the new facility was the Saturn V rocket launch of the Apollo 4 mission on November 9, 1967. Twelve more Saturn V launches followed, including the historic Apollo 11 mission in 1969 that landed astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the Moon. The final Saturn V launch, in 1973, carried the Skylab space station to orbit. The launch complex was then adapted for the space shuttle program, and each shuttle, from 1981 until the final mission in 2011, launched from this complex.
Following the end of the space shuttle program, the private company SpaceX signed a 20-year lease agreement to use part of the launch complex beginning in 2014. The first SpaceX launch from the Kennedy Space Center took place on February 19, 2017. NASA retained use of the remaining half of the launch complex, and on November 16, 2022, the Artemis 1 mission, representing a new program to place astronauts on the Moon, took off from the Kennedy Space Center.