Lockheed Martin Opens MAB-5 Facility to Accelerate Next Generation Interceptor Production

Table of Contents

This text covers Lockheed Martin’s June 1, 2026, inauguration of Missile Assembly Building 5 (MAB-5) in Courtland, Alabama.

The facility is a major capital investment directly tied to the U.S. Missile Defense Agency’s (MDA) Next Generation Interceptor (NGI) program, which serves as the primary line of defense within the Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) framework to intercept incoming intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).

The core themes, operational methodologies, and historical context outlined in the text can be broken down as follows:

The Facility & The NGI Program Architecture

MAB-5 expands Lockheed Martin’s footprint in North Alabama with an 88,000-square-foot footprint explicitly designed to transition the NGI program from technology development into sustained, repeatable product manufacturing.

  • Manufacturing Strategy: The facility uses a “Born Digital” approach. It integrates digital twins, automated alignment systems, and direct digital work instructions to connect engineering data right to the shop floor. This cuts down on manual material handling and ensures the tight geometric tolerances required for complex aerospace hardware.
  • Modular Open Architecture: Unlike older systems that require removing an entire missile from its silo for servicing, the NGI features a modular design. Software updates and subsystem hardware upgrades can be integrated directly while the asset remains in its silo, which drastically reduces maintenance downtime and lifecycle costs.
  • Operational Integration: The NGI is engineered to sit inside a highly connected command-and-control matrix, parsing real-time sensor telemetry from ground radars, Aegis vessels, and space-based tracking layers to intercept multiple complex threats simultaneously.

Geographic and Historical Footprint

The facility represents a full-circle moment for the Courtland site, bridging historic military infrastructure with 21st-century defense tech.

Manufacturing will be split across two key nodes in Alabama: Courtland will manage final assembly, integration, and digital lifecycle testing, while the Troy facility handles large-scale structural manufacturing and major hardware integration.

Global Context Shift

Note on Text Shift: The final paragraph of the text pivots sharply from North American missile defense to global maritime systems, highlighting Lockheed Martin’s presence in Australia (140 personnel supporting the Royal Australian Navy’s Hobart-class destroyers, the Hunter-class frigate program, and upcoming submarine sustainment initiatives).

This reflects the company’s broader corporate strategy: taking core defense, radar, and sensor systems refined for domestic projects and modifying them for allied naval platforms worldwide.