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    Historic Cape Canaveral Space Force Station Skid Strip renovated for modern space mission needs

    Historic Cape Canaveral Space Force Station Skid Strip renovated for modern space mission needs

    Photo By Amanda Inman | Col. Christopher Bulson, Space Launch Delta 45’s deputy commander for support, marks...... read more read more

    FLORIDA, UNITED STATES

    04.23.2026

    Story by Emre Kelly 

    Space Launch Delta 45

    Historic Cape Canaveral Space Force Station Skid Strip renovated for modern space mission needs

    CAPE CANAVERAL SPACE FORCE STATION, Fla. -- Leaders reopened the historic runway known as the Skid Strip this week after a two-year\, large-scale renovation\, marking a new era for one of the most critical pieces of infrastructure supporting U.S. space launch capabilities.

    On Tuesday, about 60 leaders from Space Launch Delta 45 gathered for a ribbon-cutting ceremony to celebrate the project’s completion. The renovation transformed the previously aging runway into a modern, unified strip ready to support some of the nation’s heaviest military aircraft and payloads.

    Workers originally built the runway in the 1950s. It earned its Skid Strip name as a landing site for Snark cruise missiles, which used metal skids instead of wheels to grind to a halt. Over the decades, repairs and updates turned the 10,000-foot-long, 250-foot-wide runway into a patchwork.

    The Space Launch Delta 45 Civil Engineer Squadron and the Air Force Civil Engineer Center led the comprehensive overhaul and addressed these deficiencies. The $50.9 million project added new 1,000-foot-long concrete ends to better support massive aircraft like the C-5 Galaxy and C-17 Globemaster III, the primary visitors that deliver satellite payloads and mission equipment. Workers also installed 366 modern LED light fixtures and brought the entire runway up to current codes.

    “The mission here at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station is going to continue to evolve, and it’s only through platforms like this that we’re going to be able to stay ahead of our adversaries,” Col. Christopher Bulson, Space Launch Delta 45’s deputy commander for support, said during the ceremony. “Right now, we do about a third of all global launches.”

    Construction presented a massive logistical undertaking. At its peak, 80 trucks per day transited Cape Canaveral Space Force Station to deliver materials, and a total of 4,520 trucks took part in the project. The renewed runway reaches 26 inches into the Florida soil to ensure it has a strong, durable foundation.

    The work faced unique Florida challenges, including a brief delay when crews relocated gopher tortoises that had undermined some construction areas.

    All told, the renovation of the Skid Strip took about two years and finished four months ahead of schedule. Officials originally granted justification to proceed in 2018.

    “The scope and scale of this project was massive and to see the Air Force take that on in support of the Space Force mission has been truly incredible,” Bulson said. “As Cape Canaveral has adjusted over the decades, it’s been about adapting to the new mission of setting launch records.”

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 04.23.2026
    Date Posted: 04.23.2026 14:58
    Story ID: 563406
    Location: FLORIDA, US

    Web Views: 7
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN