Cheyenne Mountain Space Force Station
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Cold WarThe requirement for a hardened command and control center was identified in the late 1950s as a defense against nuclear attack by long-range Soviet bombers. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers supervised the excavation of Cheyenne Mountain some 1500 feet underground and the construction of an operational center complex within the granite mountain. Internally, the complex consisted of fifteen free-standing but interconnected buildings, each shock-mounted on large springs (1,300 total), connected to the outside world by a two-mile access tunnel with two portals to the outside. The entrance to the underground building complex was protected by two 23 ton blast doors that would be closed in the event of an impending attack. The complex is self-sufficient with power, water, and climate systems as well as quarters and mess facilities to sustain buttoned up operations. Communications facilities ranged from landlines to hardened radio and satellite terminals. The 425L System portion of the NORAD Cheyenne Mountain Complex achieved initial operational capability (IOC) on 1 Jan 1966. The Cheyenne Mountain facility became fully operational as the NORAD Combat Operations Center on 6 Feb 1967. On 20 Apr 1966, the 425L System became fully operational.
Current StatusCheyenne Mountain Air Force Station is owned and operated by Air Force Space Command. NORAD and USNORTHCOM use just under 30% of the floor space within the complex and comprise approximately 5% of the daily population at Cheyenne Mountain. Now the Cheyenne Mountain Complex serves as NORAD and USNORTHCOM's Alternate Command Center and as a training site for crew qualification. Day-to-day crew operations for NORAD and USNORTHCOM typically take place at Peterson Air Force Base. The station is host to more than a dozen DoD agencies including the Defense Intelligence Agency. Public tours of Cheyenne Mountain are not currently available.
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