High Profile JSF Project Will Support Marine Operations Worldwide

 |  Government
JSF facility
Artist's rendering of the JSF training facility being built by Sundt at the Marine Corps Air Station in Yuma, Ariz.

Sundt has been building projects for the United States military since 1902, when horses still played a prominent role in our nation’s defenses. Fast forward more than 100 years and we are still building high-profile jobs for our armed forces – albeit of the non-equine variety – including one of the Naval Facilities Engineering Command’s (NAVFAC) top priorities: a training facility for the F-35B, a highly sophisticated joint-strike-fighter (JSF) aircraft that has short takeoff, vertical landing, and stealth capabilities. When the first F-35Bs are introduced next year, they will become the principal, elite aircraft supporting Marine Corps reconnaissance and combat missions around the world.

Sundt’s $18.4 million contract is to manage the design and construction of a 43,000-square-foot JSF flight simulation facility for the F-35B at the Marine Corps Air Station in Yuma, Ariz. As the second project of its kind in the United States – and the first west of the Mississippi River – it will be used to train pilots through the use of 12 JSF simulators that replicate real-world missions and challenges while saving on fuel costs and aircraft maintenance. The facility will also house mission briefing and de-briefing rooms, administrative space and offices.

Because the engine, avionics and weapons systems of the F-35B are highly classified, the project area – not to mention the base itself – has extremely tight security. Sundt’s crew members and subcontractors have gone through extensive background checks to gain clearance and site access. Another challenge is the project’s fast-track, 12-month schedule: construction began in June 2011 and must be complete by June 1, 2012 in time for the arrival of the first squadron of pilots for training.