Relativity Space · Cape Canaveral, Florida, United States
Launch Pads
—
Annual Launches
1-3
Max Payload (LEO)
—
Established
2019
Launch Complex 16 at Cape Canaveral has been leased and modernized by Relativity Space for its Terran R medium-lift reusable rocket. The historic pad originally supported Titan I and Titan II launches in the 1960s. Relativity Space uses 3D printing to manufacture most of the Terran R rocket, aiming to revolutionize launch vehicle production.
| Region | North America |
| Country | 🇺🇸 United States |
| Coordinates | 28.4602° N, -80.5628° E |
| Ownership | Private |
| Parent Entity | Relativity Space, Inc. |
| Regulatory Regime | U.S. Space Force Eastern Range + FAA-AST Part 450 vehicle license |
| Latitude Advantage | 28.5°N — standard Cape Eastern-Range easterly Atlantic boost for LEO/GTO. |
| Azimuth Range | 35°–120° (LEO to GTO via Eastern Range) |
| Employees | Not separately disclosed (Relativity total ~1,000 across HQ + Florida) |
| Website | https://www.relativityspace.com/ |
Anchor Tenants
Active Users
Strategic Value
Sole Relativity launch pad and the test case for whether large-scale additive manufacturing can compete on cadence and unit economics with SpaceX. Terran R first flight is the most-watched debut on the 2026 manifest after New Glenn's ramp.
Recent Activity
Terran R pad infrastructure activation continued through 2025; Relativity raised additional growth capital led by Eric Schmidt in 2025 to push Terran R debut.
2026
Terran R inaugural orbital flight (target window)
2027
First Terran R booster recovery attempt