Axiom Space Relocates to Texas to Expand Space Ecosystem

Axiom Space Relocates to Texas to Expand Space Ecosystem

Axiom Space, the leader in commercial human space exploration, announced it has officially changed the company's legal domicile from Delaware to Texas, planting its roots deeper in the state that shares its conviction: what happens in space profoundly shapes life on Earth. The move aligns the company's legal home with its operational headquarters in Houston, anchoring Axiom Space fully in the heart of the American space industry and the community it has called home since its founding in 2016.

“Texas has demonstrated, consistently and deliberately, that it wants innovative companies to thrive here and has built the policy and regulatory framework accordingly,” said Dr. Jonathan Cirtain, CEO and President of Axiom Space. “For Axiom Space, establishing Texas as both our operational and legal home puts us squarely in a state that understands our mission, supports our industry, and shares in what we are working to achieve." 

Texas is actively transforming into the nerve center of the new space economy. The state has made bold financial and infrastructural commitments, building a business environment designed to turn ambition into reality. That ambition mirrors Axiom Space's own mission: to make low-Earth orbit (LEO) a permanent laboratory and platform for solving humanity's greatest challenges, from medicine and materials to manufacturing and more.

Axiom Space's presence in Texas is already generating tangible impact. The company is a growing contributor to the state's economy and workforce, employing approximately 700 people, the majority of whom are in Texas, and pioneering the next generation of space infrastructure that will allow industries to achieve in microgravity what is simply impossible on Earth. The breakthroughs enabled onboard Axiom Station will not stay in orbit. They will return as new therapies, new materials, new technologies, and new possibilities for people everywhere.

The company's Houston footprint reflects its mission at every level. Its Assembly Integration and Test Facility, built as an anchor tenant at the Houston Spaceport, a federally licensed commercial spaceport at Ellington Airport, is where Axiom Station modules will complete final assembly and integration before ascending to orbit, ensuring the United States maintains its leadership in LEO. Nearby, the Space Station Development Facility drives the design and mission services work that will define the orbital economy of tomorrow. And in Axiom Space's spacesuit lab, engineers are crafting the next generation spacesuit that will return humanity to the lunar surface for the first time in more than 50 years.

The redomicile also builds on extraordinary momentum seen through Texas space policy. The state legislature established the Space Exploration & Aeronautics Research Fund (SEARF) in 2023 with a $150-million appropriation to catalyze research, infrastructure, and technology development, as well as a $200-million allocation for the Texas A&M Space Institute, a multi-tenant facility designed to advance lunar and Mars systems. In 2025, the legislature approved an additional $300 million in grants. Together with the oversight and advocacy of the Texas Space Commission, this state-backed investment is creating a powerful gravitational pull for companies committed to long-term growth in space and to delivering the benefits of that growth back to Earth.

Axiom Space is one of the direct beneficiaries of this commitment, having been awarded a $5.5 million SEARF grant to advance its orbital computing capabilities, expanding Axiom Space's role from hardware builder to comprehensive space infrastructure provider and bringing the processing power of orbit to bear on problems that matter on the ground. At its core, Axiom Space exists to ensure that humanity never loses its footing in LEO and that the extraordinary environment of microgravity remains open, accessible, and productive for the scientists, innovators, and industries that can use it to change the world below. That work is led from Texas, grounded in Houston, and aimed at a future that is as boundless as space itself.

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Publisher: SatNow
Tags:-  LEOGround

GNSS Constellations - A list of all GNSS satellites by constellations

beidou

Satellite NameOrbit Date
BeiDou-3 G4Geostationary Orbit (GEO)17 May, 2023
BeiDou-3 G2Geostationary Orbit (GEO)09 Mar, 2020
Compass-IGSO7Inclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)09 Feb, 2020
BeiDou-3 M19Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)16 Dec, 2019
BeiDou-3 M20Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)16 Dec, 2019
BeiDou-3 M21Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)23 Nov, 2019
BeiDou-3 M22Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)23 Nov, 2019
BeiDou-3 I3Inclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)04 Nov, 2019
BeiDou-3 M23Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)22 Sep, 2019
BeiDou-3 M24Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)22 Sep, 2019

galileo

Satellite NameOrbit Date
GSAT0223MEO - Near-Circular05 Dec, 2021
GSAT0224MEO - Near-Circular05 Dec, 2021
GSAT0219MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0220MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0221MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0222MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0215MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017
GSAT0216MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017
GSAT0217MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017
GSAT0218MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017

glonass

Satellite NameOrbit Date
Kosmos 2569--07 Aug, 2023
Kosmos 2564--28 Nov, 2022
Kosmos 2559--10 Oct, 2022
Kosmos 2557--07 Jul, 2022
Kosmos 2547--25 Oct, 2020
Kosmos 2545--16 Mar, 2020
Kosmos 2544--11 Dec, 2019
Kosmos 2534--27 May, 2019
Kosmos 2529--03 Nov, 2018
Kosmos 2527--16 Jun, 2018

gps

Satellite NameOrbit Date
Navstar 82Medium Earth Orbit19 Jan, 2023
Navstar 81Medium Earth Orbit17 Jun, 2021
Navstar 78Medium Earth Orbit22 Aug, 2019
Navstar 77Medium Earth Orbit23 Dec, 2018
Navstar 76Medium Earth Orbit05 Feb, 2016
Navstar 75Medium Earth Orbit31 Oct, 2015
Navstar 74Medium Earth Orbit15 Jul, 2015
Navstar 73Medium Earth Orbit25 Mar, 2015
Navstar 72Medium Earth Orbit29 Oct, 2014
Navstar 71Medium Earth Orbit02 Aug, 2014

irnss

Satellite NameOrbit Date
NVS-01Geostationary Orbit (GEO)29 May, 2023
IRNSS-1IInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)12 Apr, 2018
IRNSS-1HSub Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (Sub-GTO)31 Aug, 2017
IRNSS-1GGeostationary Orbit (GEO)28 Apr, 2016
IRNSS-1FGeostationary Orbit (GEO)10 Mar, 2016
IRNSS-1EGeosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)20 Jan, 2016
IRNSS-1DInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)28 Mar, 2015
IRNSS-1CGeostationary Orbit (GEO)16 Oct, 2014
IRNSS-1BInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)04 Apr, 2014
IRNSS-1AInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)01 Jul, 2013
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