Cape Canaveral Launch Complex 14


Launch Complex 14 is a launch site at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. Part of the Missile Row lineup of launch sites in the region, LC-14 was used for various crewed and uncrewed Atlas launches, including the February 1962 Friendship 7 flight aboard which John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth.
LC-14 is currently leased to Stoke Space for their Nova launch vehicle.

History

Atlas and Mercury

LC-14 was the first Atlas pad in operation and hosted the initial Atlas A and B test flights in 1957-58 It was also the only one of the original four pads to never have a booster explode on it. By 1959, it was decided to convert the pad for Atlas D missile and space launches, and a large service tower was added early in the year. The first Atlas flown from the renovated LC-14 was Missile 7D on May 18; however, a problem with the launcher hold-down arms damaged the missile and caused its explosion shortly after launch. This was traced to improper procedures during the renovation of the pad and was quickly fixed. The first space launch off LC-14 was the Big Joe Mercury test in September. As the designated Mercury-Atlas facility, LC-14 was thus the only Atlas pad having the infrastructure needed for crewed launches. The first MIDAS satellites, one Atlas-Able launch, and a few more ICBM tests were conducted from LC-14 before it was completely turned over to NASA.
LC-14 is most well known as the launch site for NASA's Mercury-Atlas 6 flight, which made Glenn the first American in orbit. It was also the launch site of the remaining three Mercury-Atlas flights and various uncrewed Atlas launches. Later, it was the site for Atlas-Agena launches for the Agena Target Vehicles for Project Gemini.
Following decommissioning and abandonment as an active launch site, LC-14 slowly fell into decay. The proximity to salty ocean air created an ideal environment for corrosion of metal components, and the complex's red metal gantry structures were dismantled for safety reasons during the 1970s.

Restoration

In 1997, the 45th Space Wing embarked on a partial restoration of LC-14 under the aegis of the 45th Operations Support Squadron and its commander, Lt Col Dennis Hilley, USAF. Although extensive repairs were made by Boeing and Johnson Controls, with additional assistance from Lockheed Martin and Brown and Root, the restoration utilized no military construction or military operations and maintenance funding and was affected strictly with military, DoD civilian, NASA civilian, DoD contractor and NASA contractor volunteers. Several months later, the exterior and interior of the original blockhouse and its nearby astronaut parking area had been restored, with the blockhouse converted into a conference facility for military, NASA and contractor use.
Present at the dedication in May 1998 were former Mercury astronauts Colonel Gordon Cooper, USAF and Commander Scott Carpenter, USN ; Mrs. Betty Grissom, widow of Lt Col Gus Grissom, USAF; and comedian Bill Dana, known for his "José Jiménez, the reluctant astronaut" character. Appearing periodically on The Ed Sullivan Show in the 1960s, the character caught on as a subject of humor among the seven Mercury astronauts.
Among other Mercury astronauts, former U.S. Senator John Glenn could not attend due to preparations for his then-pending Space Shuttle flight, and Captain Wally Schirra, USN could not attend due to a scheduling conflict. Deke Slayton had died in 1993, while Rear Admiral Alan Shepard, USN extended his regrets due to illness. Largely unknown at the time was that Shepard was suffering from terminal leukemia, and he died shortly after the dedication.
In addition to the total interior renovation, the blockhouse contains historical documents, photos and memorabilia from Project Mercury, as well as photos of the blockhouse area before, during and after the restoration. Future improvements to the pad itself are also planned as time and contributory funding permits.
The entrance road to LC-14 is marked by several memorials and signs commemorating Project Mercury and the four of six crewed Mercury missions launched there. This includes a large sculpture of the Project Mercury symbol constructed of titanium, under which is buried a time capsule containing technical documents of the Mercury program. The time capsule is scheduled to be opened in 2464, 500 years after the official conclusion of the program. With its withdrawal from operational status, a memorial marker in granite was also placed at the beginning of the concrete ramp that leads to LC-14's launch pad and two outdoor kiosks were erected to contain historical photos.

Use by Stoke Space

On March 7, 2023, Stoke Space was allocated the launch complex for their upcoming fully reusable Nova launch vehicle. Space Launch Delta 45 of the U.S. Space Force made the decision to optimize the use of excess launch property and the Eastern Range along Florida's coastline.
Construction began on October 21, 2024, following an environmental assessment. In late 2025, CEO Andy Lapsa stated that the launch pad is expected to be operational by the end of the year, with the first launch from the pad targeted for 2026.

Launch history

Statistics

List of launches

All missile tests and MIDAS launches operated by the United States Air Force. All other flights operated by NASA.
No.DateTime Launch VehicleConfigurationMission/PayloadResultRemarks
111 June 195719:37SM-65 AtlasAtlas ASuborbital testFirst launch from LC-14, maiden flight of the SM-65 Atlas, and first flight of the Atlas rocket family. Premature engine shutdown 50 seconds into flight activated range safety protocols.
225 September 195719:57SM-65 AtlasAtlas ASuborbital testPremature engine shutdown 63 seconds into flight activated range safety protocols.
317 December 195717:39SM-65 AtlasAtlas ASuborbital testFirst successful launch from LC-14.
47 February 195819:37SM-65 AtlasAtlas ASuborbital testVernier engine failure led to engine shutdown and tumble 164 seconds into flight, leading to range safety protocols.
55 April 195817:01SM-65 AtlasAtlas ASuborbital testTurbopump failed 105 seconds into flight. Range safety not activated, and missile impacted the ocean in one piece. Final Atlas A launch from LC-14.
614 September 195805:24SM-65 AtlasAtlas BSuborbital testFirst Atlas B launch from LC-14.
729 November 195802:27SM-65 AtlasAtlas BSuborbital test
816 January 195904:00SM-65 AtlasAtlas BSuborbital testUnknown control difficulties led to engine shutdown 121 seconds into flight. Final Atlas B launch from LC-14.
919 May 195904:30SM-65 AtlasAtlas DSuborbital testFirst Atlas D launch from LC-14. Missile damaged at liftoff by hold-down arm, leading to pressurization failure 64 seconds into flight and range safety protocols.
109 September 195908:19Mercury-AtlasAtlas DBig Joe 1Suborbital launch. First civilian launch and first Project Mercury flight from LC-14. Carried a boilerplate Mercury capsule. Faulty electrical contacts led to booster jettison failure and limitation of range. Capsule successfully recovered.
1126 November 195907:26Atlas-AbleAtlas D / AblePioneer P-3Part of the Pioneer program, aimed at exploring the Moon. First orbital attempt from LC-14 and only one so far beyond low Earth orbit. Maiden flight of the Atlas Able, and only flight from LC-14. Payload fairing separated 45 seconds into flight, leading to vehicle breakup.
1226 February 196017:25Atlas-AgenaAtlas LV-3 / Agena-AMIDAS 1Part of the Missile Defense Alarm System series of early warning satellites. Maiden flight of the Atlas-Agena. Staging issue damaged RM-81 Agena, causing failure to achieve orbit.
1324 May 196017:36Atlas-AgenaAtlas LV-3 / Agena-AMIDAS 2Part of the Missile Defense Alarm System series of early warning satellites. First successful Atlas-Agena flight, and first successful orbital launch from LC-14.
1422 June 196014:49SM-65 AtlasAtlas DSuborbital test
1529 July 196013:13Mercury-AtlasAtlas LV-3B / MercuryMercury-Atlas 1Suborbital launch. First flight of an operational Mercury capsule, designed to test reentry. Contained no launch escape system. Rocket suffered structural failure during max q 58 seconds into launch.
1619 September 196018:31SM-65 AtlasAtlas DSuborbital test
1722 October 196005:13SM-65 AtlasAtlas DSuborbital testFinal military launch from LC-14.
1821 February 196114:12Mercury-AtlasAtlas LV-3B / MercuryMercury-Atlas 2Suborbital launch. Reflight of MA-1's objectives, but with added launch escape tower.
1925 April 196116:15Mercury-AtlasAtlas LV-3B / MercuryMercury-Atlas 3First orbital attempt for a Mercury capsule. Contained crewman simulator. Guidance failure led to breakup 43 seconds after launch. Launch escape system activated and capsule was successfully recovered.
2013 September 196114:04Mercury-AtlasAtlas LV-3B / MercuryMercury-Atlas 4Reflight of MA-3. Contained crewman simulator. Completed one orbit around Earth before reentering and splashing down. First orbital flight for Project Mercury.
2129 November 196115:07Mercury-AtlasAtlas LV-3B / MercuryMercury-Atlas 5Carried chimpanzee Enos into LEO, becoming the first live animal from the United States to reach orbit. Completed two orbits before reentering.
2220 February 196214:47Mercury-AtlasAtlas LV-3B / MercuryMercury-Atlas 6
First crewed orbital flight from the United States, first crewed launch on an Atlas, and first crewed launch from LC-14. Carried astronaut John Glenn into three orbits before successfully returning to Earth. Third crewed launch of Project Mercury, following Mercury-Redstone 3 and MR-4 the previous year.
2324 May 196212:45Mercury-AtlasAtlas LV-3B / MercuryMercury-Atlas 7
Second of four crewed orbital flights of Mercury-Atlas. Carried astronaut Scott Carpenter into orbit. Human error in retrograde burn led to off-course splashdown. Originally slated to carry astronaut Deke Slayton before atrial fibrillation diagnosis grounded him.
243 October 196212:15Mercury-AtlasAtlas LV-3B / MercuryMercury-Atlas 8
Third of four crewed flights of Mercury-Atlas. Carried astronaut Wally Schirra into orbit. Completed six orbits before reentering.
2515 May 196313:04Mercury-AtlasAtlas LV-3B / MercuryMercury-Atlas 9
Fourth and final of four crewed flights of Mercury-Atlas. Carried astronaut Gordon Cooper into orbit, completing 22 orbits over 34 hours before returning to Earth. Last crewed launch of an Atlas rocket until Boeing CFT in 2024, and most recent crewed launch from LC-14. Last flight of Project Mercury and most recent solo American orbital mission.
2625 October 196515:00Atlas-AgenaAtlas SLV-3 / Agena-DGemini 6 ATVFirst launch of the Agena Target Vehicle, tasked with docking with Gemini 6. First flight from LC-14 for Project Gemini. Vehicle breakup following ignition of Agena six minutes into flight. Gemini 6 mission reorganized into Gemini 6A to rendezvous with Gemini 7.
2716 March 196615:00Atlas-AgenaAtlas SLV-3 / Agena-DGemini 8 ATVATV launch, tasked with docking with Gemini 8. First successful launch of the ATV, and participated in first ever spacecraft docking. Mission cut short and aborted after thruster failure on Gemini caused spacecraft to tumble. Was later visited by Gemini 10.
2817 May 196615:15Atlas-AgenaAtlas SLV-3 / Agena-DGemini 9 ATVATV launch, tasked with docking with Gemini 9. Vehicle went into unplanned pitch prior to booster engine cutoff, causing impact into the Atlantic. Gemini 9 mission reorganized into Gemini 9A to rendezvous and dock with ATDA.
291 June 196615:00Atlas SLV-3Atlas SLV-3 / ATDAGemini 9A ATDAOnly launch of ATDA, tasked with docking with Gemini 9A. Fairing failed to jettison, leading to docking being aborted during rendezvous and mission to be cut early.
3018 July 196620:39Atlas-AgenaAtlas SLV-3 / Agena-DGemini 10 ATVATV launch, tasked with docking with Gemini 10. First fully successful ATV mission, and performed first burn of a spacecraft while docked.
3112 September 196613:05Atlas-AgenaAtlas SLV-3 / Agena-DGemini 11 ATVATV launch, tasked with docking with Gemini 11. Was target in first direct-ascent rendezvous. Participated in first test of artificial gravity in space, using a tether between it and the Gemini spacecraft. Set a non-Apollo crewed altitude record of 1,374 km that lasted until Polaris Dawn in 2024.
3211 November 196619:07Atlas-AgenaAtlas SLV-3 / Agena-DGemini 12 ATVATV launch, tasked with docking with Gemini 12. Orbital boost was cancelled due to engine problem after insertion into LEO. Final flight of the ATV, and final mission of Project Gemini. Most recent launch from LC-14.