After President Donald Trump’s recent decision to move Space Command headquarters back to Huntsville, some are taking note about just how many victories the Rocket City has had in recent months.
Huntsville was chosen as the new location because it is one of the cities with the most resources in space flight, missile defense, military installations, and similar technology.
“This is a landmark moment for Alabama, and it reflects the state’s continued leadership in aerospace, innovation and national defense,” said Ellen McNair, Secretary of the Alabama Department of Commerce. “With its proven talent pipeline, world-class research assets and a deep bench of industry expertise, Huntsville offers Space Command an ecosystem uniquely equipped to support its mission.”
The Space Command decision isn’t the only thing Huntsville’s leaders are celebrating. Atombits.com, which covers “technology not found in the cloud,” had a viral post on social media that highlights some of the Rocket City’s other major developments in the tech sector.
“In 2025, one city has been dominating hard tech.
Huntsville, Alabama:
– Selected as the headquarters for U.S. Space Command
-@PDW_ai
opened a 90,000-square-foot facility for American UAS production. Drone Factory 01 will employ hundreds and has capacity for 5,350 drones (annually) across FPVs and multi-mission UAS.
-@K9DefenseTech
, the American UAS startup, relocated its headquarters to Huntsville.
-@L3HarrisTech
expanded its Solid Rocket Motor (SRM) production facility.
– Northrop Grumman ramped up missile-defense manufacturing with a $150 million, 200,000-square-foot campus expansion.
– Huntsville PD expanded its Drone as a First Responder program with Skyfire AI.
-@allencontrol, the C-UAS firm, partnered with the University of Alabama in Huntsville to advance industry research
-@AeonIndustrial
, a developer of advanced tactical weapon systems, is expanding into Huntsville and partnering with the University of Alabama in Huntsville.
-@GlaukosCorp, a biotech firm focused on eye diseases, announced an $82 million facility in the city.
– Special Aerospace Services (now Aurex) opened a 44,000-square-foot manufacturing and R&D facility.
– Veil Genomics launched in Huntsville; the startup develops long-read DNA sequencing and analysis technology.
– The City of Huntsville appointed a Chief Innovation Officer to advance city technology initiatives.”
Huntsville Mayor Tommy Battle said recently that the city is ready for the growth that will come from Space Command and the tech sector as a whole.
“Local governments with the city of Huntsville and Madison County for the last several years have been looking at the opportunity that we may have for this to happen,” Battle said. “This is not about politics as much as it’s about national security and what’s best for our country… we’ve worked on our roads and our infrastructure, and we’re trying to prepare in such a way that we’re ready for this day.”
Yaffee is a contributing writer to Yellowhammer News and hosts “The Yaffee Program” weekdays 9-11 a.m. on WVNN. You can follow him on X @Yaffee