Home Library Spaceports Starbase
🏗️ Spaceport

Starbase (Boca Chica)

SpaceX's dedicated Starship facility in South Texas — where the world's largest and most powerful rocket is built, tested and launched. Home of the orbital launch mount, Mechazilla tower and rapid-iteration development.

🚀 Next Scheduled Launch
Starship | Flight 13 — 30 Jun 2026

Overview

Starbase is SpaceX's private launch and manufacturing facility located at Boca Chica, on the southernmost tip of Texas near the Mexican border. Originally a small test site for Starship prototypes, Starbase has grown into a massive industrial complex where SpaceX designs, builds, assembles and launches the Starship super heavy-lift vehicle — the largest and most powerful rocket ever flown.

25.99°N
Latitude
97.15°W
Longitude
Launches This Year

Facility Details

ParameterDetail
LocationBoca Chica, Cameron County, Texas, USA
Coordinates25.99°N, 97.15°W
OperatorSpaceX
Established / First Launch~2014 (test site); ~2020 (launch operations)
Active VehiclesStarship / Super Heavy
Launch PadsOrbital Launch Mount A (OLM-A), integration tower with Mechazilla
Orbital AccessLEO, GTO, interplanetary, lunar
Inclination Range~26°–52°

Key Infrastructure

Orbital Launch Mount (OLM): A massive steel launch table with a water-cooled steel plate flame deflector system, installed after IFT-1 damaged the original concrete pad. The OLM supports the full stack (Starship + Super Heavy) at ~5,000 tonnes total mass.

Integration Tower & Mechazilla: A 146 m (480 ft) steel tower used to stack Starship onto Super Heavy. The tower is equipped with the "Mechazilla" chopstick arms — two enormous mechanical arms designed to catch the returning Super Heavy booster mid-air. SpaceX successfully demonstrated a booster catch during IFT-5 in October 2024.

Starfactory: SpaceX's on-site manufacturing facility where Starship vehicles and Super Heavy boosters are fabricated from stainless steel, using rapid iteration and parallel production lines.

Booster Catch

The "chopstick catch" is one of the most extraordinary feats in aerospace engineering. Instead of landing on legs (like Falcon 9), the Super Heavy booster returns to the launch site and is caught by the tower's mechanical arms, guided by GPS and the vehicle's grid fins. This eliminates the need for landing legs (saving mass) and positions the booster directly at the launch mount for rapid turnaround. The first successful catch on IFT-5 was widely considered the most impressive engineering demonstration in modern rocketry.

Environmental Considerations

Starbase's location adjacent to Boca Chica State Park and tidal flats has generated environmental scrutiny. SpaceX works with the FAA and US Fish and Wildlife Service on environmental assessments for each launch licence. Launch operations require temporary road closures and evacuations of the surrounding area due to the massive energy released by Super Heavy's 33 Raptor engines.

Timeline

2014
SpaceX leases land at Boca Chica for test site
2019
Starhopper flight tests (150 m hop)
2020–21
SN8–SN15 high-altitude test flights (some spectacular failures)
2023
IFT-1 — first orbital Starship launch attempt (April)
2024
IFT-5 — first successful booster catch by Mechazilla (October)

Frequently Asked Questions

Mechazilla is the nickname for Starbase's launch and catch tower. It features two massive mechanical arms ('chopsticks') that catch the returning Super Heavy booster mid-air instead of the booster landing on legs. The first successful catch occurred during IFT-5 in October 2024.
Boca Chica is partially accessible by public road (State Highway 4), and you can see the launch facilities from a distance. SpaceX closes the road during launch operations. There is no official visitor centre, but the site is a popular destination for space enthusiasts and 'launch chasers'. Several webcam feeds provide 24/7 views of launch operations.
🛰️ Explore the Full Library
Trackers, statistics, satellite profiles, launch vehicles, space agencies, space weather and more.
Open Library →
Last updated: