According to a recent LinkedIn post from Impulse Space, the company has opened a 20,000-square-foot manufacturing facility outside Boulder, Colorado. The post indicates that the site is dedicated to expanding Guidance, Navigation, and Control, or GNC, development for its Mira and Helios spacecraft platforms.
Claim 30% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
The LinkedIn post explains that spacecraft built at Impulse rely on GNC systems from the Colorado team for orbital sensing, orientation, and maneuvering. These systems reportedly support star tracking, Safe Mode, inertial navigation, and precision delta-V control already flying on the firm’s LEO Express missions.
The post also notes that the new facility adds multi-axis CNC and precision mill-turn machining for propulsion hardware, including valves used during orbital burns. This vertical integration suggests potential improvements in quality control, schedule certainty, and cost structure across Impulse Space’s propulsion and mission hardware supply chain.
According to the post, the company views this expansion as helping to close the loop between development and mission execution at its Colorado campus. For investors, this may signal a move toward greater in-house capability that could support higher mission cadence and strengthen Impulse Space’s position in the orbital transport and in-space services market.
The LinkedIn update also mentions that the firm is expanding its team in the region. If hiring scales with the facility’s capacity, this could imply expectations of growing demand for Mira, Helios, and related LEO Express services, with potential long-term implications for revenue growth and competitive differentiation in space infrastructure and logistics.

