Late final 12 months, a Soyuz rocket launched three astronauts to orbit from the Russia-run Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
However there was extra “blast” to the Nov. 27 blastoff than supposed. The launch broken Website 31 at Baikonur, Russia’s solely lively pad that helps crewed liftoffs to the Worldwide Area Station (ISS).
“The launch pad’s situation is presently being assessed,” Roscosmos acknowledged, including that “all vital spare parts can be found for restore, and the injury shall be repaired shortly.”
Website 31’s “service cabin” was severely broken, leaving all the launch infrastructure unavailable to be used.
The true implications of the blast marks on Russia’s rocketry ego remained imprecise. Maybe there was an uncommon slip in high quality management, advised some outdoors specialists. Regardless of the trigger, the result was unwelcome: a grounding of Russian crewed flights to the ISS.
However rockets will quickly begin flying from Website 31 once more, if all goes to plan.
Caring for enterprise
On Tuesday (March 3), Roscosmos introduced that Website 31 has been repaired.
Greater than 150 workers from the company’s Heart for Operation of Area Floor-Primarily based Infrastructure and representatives from 4 contractors have wrapped up work on the broken launch pad.
“2,350 sq. meters [25,300 square feet] of constructions had been ready and painted, all fastening models had been changed with new ones, electrical gear was utterly changed and adjusted, inspection and upkeep of service cabin parts and mechanisms had been carried out, and greater than 250 linear meters [820 feet] of welds had been accomplished,” Roscosmos mentioned in an announcement, in line with Interfax.
Probably the most difficult process, Roscosmos defined, was putting in among the cabin’s over-60-foot-long (19 m), 17-ton parts, which had been put in by the firing aperture. A particular method was developed for this patch-up.
Subsequent launch
In the meantime, the newly repaired launch pad at Baikonur is being readied to deal with its subsequent booster departure.
Now on the launch checklist — initially scheduled for departure in late 2025 — is an uncrewed Progress MS-33 cargo spacecraft.
Set for a March 22 takeoff, the Progress will dock with and resupply the Worldwide Area Station.

