Arsenal Design Bureau Explained

Arsenal Design Bureau
Type:Federal State Unitary Enterprise
Industry:Aerospace, arms industry
Predecessors:-->
Successors:-->
Founded:21 November 1949
Founders:-->
Hq Location City:Saint Petersburg
Hq Location Country:Russia
Areas Served:-->
Products:Missiles, ICMBs, artillery, spacecraft, satellites
Owners:-->
Parent:Roscosmos[1]

Arsenal Design Bureau (Russian: Конструкторское бюро «Арсенал»|Konstruktorskoye byuro Arsenal) is an engineering company active in the fields of space technology, ship artillery and civilian machine building. The company was founded in 1711 and is located in Saint Petersburg in the Russian Federation. Its full name is Arsenal Design Bureau named after Mikhail Vasil’evich Frunze Federal State Unitary Enterprise.

Overview

The company's main purpose is development and operation of space complexes and spacecraft for various purposes, and development and creation of navy artillery mounts and launchers.[2] [3] KB Arsenal is the developer of Liana electronic reconnaissance program, intended to replace the EORSATS and Tselina 2.[4]

History

KB Arsenal was founded in 1711 by Tsar Peter I of Russia as a cannon foundry.[4] Renamed to TsBK-7, the company created ICBMs between 1960 and 1980, after which it switched its focus to space research. It is the developer of over 80 spacecraft in the COSMOS series, including Russia's first nuclear power system satellites, the Kosmos 1818 and Kosmos 1867.[3] It is the oldest Russian/Soviet design bureau connected to space research.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: О мерах по созданию Государственной корпорации по космической деятельности "Роскосмос". Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации. 15 April 2017.
  2. Web site: Company profile . KB Arsenal . 2009-07-25 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100601071825/http://www.kbarsenal.ru/eng/okb.php . 2010-06-01 .
  3. Web site: KB Arsenal (Russian Federation), Space industry - Prime contractors. 2009-07-14. Jane's Space Systems and Industry. 2009-07-25.
  4. Book: Harvey, Brian. The Rebirth of the Russian Space Program. Springer. Germany. 2007. 1st. The design bureaus. 978-0-387-71354-0.