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The largest construction project ever proposed by Sandia -- the
Microsystems and Engineering Sciences Application (MESA) facility --
has received DOE approval for the Laboratories to proceed with a
conceptual design.
MESA is more than a single building: The multiple-facility integrated
complex will include $300 million of new building construction in the
southeastern-most part of Area 1 (near the microelectronics and
neutron generator facilities). By design it will be integrated with
the Joint Computational Engineering Lab (JCEL), a $29 million project
scheduled to begin construction in FY00, and the Distributed
Information Systems Laboratory (DISL), a $35 million
Sandia/California project scheduled to begin in FY01.
According to Don Cook (1900), MESA project director, Sandia is
seeking to achieve a new level of efficiency, productivity, and
innovation in integrated weapon system design associated with the
refurbishment of the nuclear stockpile. MESA will provide a link and
facilitate interaction among the three Defense Program nuclear
weapons laboratories in the areas of weapon design, computation and
engineering sciences, and microsystems development.
The tentative schedule is to begin engineering design in fiscal year
2000 and construction in 2001. The project is scheduled for
completion by 2003, and to be fully operational by 2004. MESA
eventually will house 600 employees.
The project will have an extremely broad impact, says Tom Hunter,
Senior VP of Defense Programs (9000) and Sandia sponsor of the
effort. "This project will affect nearly everyone at Sandia and is
essential to the Laboratories' future. MESA will provide the design
environment for non-nuclear parts of nuclear weapons for the 21st
century, and will include weapon component modeling and simulation,
weapons certification, and embedded microsystems, including
micromachines."
Says John Stichman (2100), Director of New Mexico weapons systems
engineering, "As we refurbish weapons to support the Stockpile Life
Extension Program, we need to know that those weapons we return to
the stockpile meet our safety and capability requirements. These
requirements pertain to the next several decades of life these
weapons would have in the stockpile. Microsystems hold the promise to
provide the most capable implementation of the safety of refurbished
weapons. The nuclear weapons systems organization is working closely
with the MESA planning staff to assure that MESA is well-aligned with
weapons systems design and development."
Says Dan Hartley,VP for Laboratory Development Div. 4000, "While
MESA is clearly focused on supporting our nuclear weapons mission, it
also represents the leading edge of what private industry is
interested in: intelligent microsystems. The demand for less
expensive, more intelligent, smaller systems is ubiquitous in
industry, and we believe that what we're doing here represents the
birth of a new industry. We already have industry interest in helping
design the facility, and their desire to use it."
Dan says MESA is also helping with our university partnerships.
"In our meetings with deans, microsystems are a high priority with
them as well, and they want to have more to do with us because we
will be defining the leading edge. Private industry and university
interest and potential involvement in MESA provides a broader
customer base for the products and technologies that MESA will
generate: this, in turn, helps our national security mission by
providing a catalyst for new ideas and technologies, by creating a
pool of talented engineers and scientists for Sandia to draw upon,
and by providing funding through joint partnerships which help to
reduce the burden on our primary customer, DOE/Defense Programs."
Approximately $95 million is slated to be funneled into new
equipment, says Don. In addition to the need to update weapons
systems with the latest technology -- to maintain reliability,
improve surety, and be confident of a supply of replacement parts --
there's the issue of attracting college graduates to Sandia.
"Students in school are being trained in new technologies," he
says. "The best and brightest have the expectation that they will
have the opportunity to apply these new technologies in a meaningful
way during their professional careers. MESA will provide a focal
point for exercising their talents and for advancing the
state-of-the-art even further."
Al Romig (1000), VP of Science, Technology, and Components Div.
1000 and corporate champion for the project, says, "This will create
a capability to do our business in a new way. First and foremost, it
will revolutionize the way we'll refurbish the nuclear stockpile.
Second, it will open up new opportunities to apply integrated
microsystem technology to other important areas, for example in the
way we build space satellites. It will also be an opportunity to
drive the creation of entirely new industries in the United States,
using our Science and Technology Park."
In the near term, says Paul McWhorter (1702), deputy director of
technical operations and microsystems technical lead, "We are
continuing to develop micromachines for the application of surety
devices for weapons."
The MESA facilities will house existing employees. Workers will be
relocated from diverse areas into the new buildings, which will
include clean rooms, laboratory space, and offices. Among trailers
and antiquated buildings slated to be demolished, because of lack of
adequate computer lines and other deficiencies, are those housing the
Compound Semiconductor Research Lab.
Last modified: September 22, 1999
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