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May 1, 2009 |
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General Dynamics Awarded Contract for Additional Trimaran Littoral Combat Ship
BATH, Maine – The U.S. Navy today awarded a contract to a Bath Iron Works-led
team for the construction of Coronado (LCS 4), the second Littoral Combat Ship (LCS)
to feature an innovative, high-speed trimaran hull. The 419-foot surface
combatant ship, equipped with open architecture-based combat systems and
computing environment developed by General Dynamics Advanced Information
Systems, will be manufactured by Austal USA in Mobile, Ala. It is scheduled for
delivery to the Navy in May 2012. Bath Iron Works is a subsidiary of General
Dynamics (NYSE: GD).
The Littoral Combat Ship is a key element of the Navy’s plan to address
asymmetric threats of the 21st century. Intended to operate in coastal areas,
the ship will be fast, highly maneuverable and geared to supporting mine
detection/elimination, anti-submarine warfare and anti-surface warfare,
particularly against small surface craft. The Navy’s first trimaran LCS,
Independence (LCS 2), is in the final stages of construction and testing in
preparation for its upcoming sea trials.
This contract will support more than 500 jobs in Austal’s Mobile shipyard, as
well as more than 100 employees of General Dynamics Bath Iron Works in Bath and
Mobile, and General Dynamics Advanced Information Systems in Pittsfield, Mass.,
Mobile and other locations.
“Recent maritime events have clearly validated the need for the U.S. Navy to
have the capabilities offered by LCS. We’re proud to be playing an important
role in fulfilling that need,” said Jeff Geiger, president of Bath Iron Works.
“Our team is ready to apply the lessons we’ve learned during the construction of
Independence (LCS 2) to help make Coronado the most-affordable, most-effective
LCS it can be.”
The ship’s open architecture computing environment – another key factor in
meeting the U.S. Navy’s requirements for a flexible, reconfigurable mission ship
– enables industry’s most capable, affordable, non-proprietary solutions to be
incorporated into the its core mission system. This computing environment,
developed by the General Dynamics Advanced Information Systems team, provides a
highly flexible information technology backbone that allows “plug and play”
integration of both the core systems and the LCS mission modules. It meets Navy
open architecture requirements, strictly adheres to published industry standards
and facilitates the integration of commercially available products. It also
allows for future growth and seamlessly integrates combat-system components to
create a core mission system solution that dramatically lowers acquisition and
lifecycle costs.
General Dynamics Bath Iron Works is the prime contractor for the General
Dynamics Littoral Combat Ship Team. Partners include Austal USA (Mobile, Ala.);
BAE Systems (Rockville, Md.); General Dynamics Advanced Information Systems
(Fairfax, Va.); L3 Communications Marine Systems (Leesburg, Va.); Maritime
Applied Physics Corporation (Baltimore, Md.); and Northrop Grumman Electronic
Systems (Baltimore, Md.).
Bath Iron Works of Bath, Maine, is a leading designer and builder of complex
surface combatants for the U.S. Navy and employs approximately 5,600 people.
General Dynamics, headquartered in Falls Church, Va., employs approximately
92,900 people worldwide. The company is a market leader in business aviation;
land and expeditionary combat systems, armaments and munitions; shipbuilding and
marine systems; and information systems and technologies. More information about
General Dynamics is available online at www.gd.com.
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