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Rocket Lab Launch Complex 1 (Māhia)

The world's first private orbital launch site — on New Zealand's remote Māhia Peninsula, providing unmatched access to sun-synchronous and low-inclination orbits with minimal range conflicts.

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Overview

Rocket Lab Launch Complex 1 (LC-1) is the world's first privately built and operated orbital launch site. Located on the Māhia Peninsula on New Zealand's North Island east coast, LC-1 provides Rocket Lab with a dedicated pad for its Electron small-sat launcher. The site's remote location, open ocean downrange trajectory in all directions, and low air traffic make it ideal for high-cadence small satellite launches with minimal range scheduling conflicts.

39.26°S
Latitude
177.86°E
Longitude
Launches This Year

Facility Details

ParameterDetail
LocationMāhia Peninsula, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand
Coordinates39.26°S, 177.86°E
OperatorRocket Lab
Established / First Launch2016 (construction); 2017 (first launch)
Active VehiclesElectron
Launch PadsPad A, Pad B
Orbital AccessSSO, LEO (wide range of inclinations)
Inclination Range~39°–98° (SSO)

Why New Zealand?

New Zealand's geographic isolation in the South Pacific provides clear downrange trajectories in nearly every direction — north, south and east — with no populated land in the flight path. This enables access to a wider range of orbital inclinations from a single site than almost any other spaceport. Low air and sea traffic means fewer range hold delays, allowing Rocket Lab to maintain a high launch cadence (every 2–3 weeks at peak).

New Zealand also offered a favourable regulatory environment. Rocket Lab worked with the NZ government to create the country's first space legislation (Outer Space and High-altitude Activities Act 2017), enabling commercial orbital launches.

Launch Cadence

LC-1 has hosted 50+ Electron launches since 2017, making Rocket Lab the second-most-frequent US-affiliated orbital launch provider after SpaceX. Two pads (A and B) allow rapid turnaround and concurrent processing of multiple vehicles. Rocket Lab also operates LC-2 at Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia for US government missions requiring domestic launch.

Timeline

2016
Launch Complex 1 construction completed
2017
First Electron launch (‘It’s a Test’)
2018
First commercial orbital launch from NZ
2023
50th Electron mission milestone

Frequently Asked Questions

New Zealand's remote South Pacific location provides clear flight paths in nearly every direction with no populated land downrange. Low air and sea traffic minimises range delays, enabling Rocket Lab to launch as frequently as every 2–3 weeks. NZ also created bespoke space legislation to enable commercial launches.
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