Jupiter SM-78 Weapon System
I&C Team 2, Çigli AB, Turkey 1961-1962
Chrysler Corporation Missile Division
HISTORY - Page 17
to house laboratories used in support of REDSTONE missile development. As the program progressed,
these structures became inadequate and, in 1953, some new construction was started. This involved three
buildings—405, 405A, and 405B—which were used as missile assembly and component hangars to meet a
modest fabrication schedule of one missile per month. Other laboratories were still housed in old
warehouses.
The next increment in the construction program came about in 1954, as a result of a growing national
interest in missile research and development. This building effort included a test stand with ancillary
buildings to permit testing of a complete missile under full thrust, a guidance and control (G&C)
laboratory, and an engineering building (488, which was later renumbered 4488 and became the
headquarters building of ABMA). When ABMA was activated, it inherited the new construction plus the old
chemical warehouses
23
.
The crash nature of the JUPITER program (so named in April 1956) demanded additional structures, and 11
construction projects were considered absolutely necessary by ABMA. These, in part, included an addition
to the structural fabrication building, a structures and mechanics laboratory, an extension to the G&C lab,
a guided missile test shop, a missile assembly-inspection hangar, and modifications to some of the 1954
construction. A total of $25 million was requested to satisfy these purposes. As it turned out, authority for
$23,968,379 was received; and, on a balance sheet of 5 January 1962, the Mobile District of the Corps of
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23. J. G. Zierdt, Chf, ABMA Cont Off, 28 Apr 56, subj: FY 57 MCA Const in the JUP Prog, in ABMA Ref Book, subj: Facil, MCA, Hist Off files.