California State University, Long Beach

10/22/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/22/2025 09:20

Ranked No. 3 in aerospace, CSULB engineering upgrades for space race

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College of Engineering Dean Jinny Rhee speaks on campus Oct 20. CSULB president Andrew Jones, left, and Long Beach Mayor Rex Richardson appear behind her.

For decades CSULB engineering grads have powered Long Beach's aerospace rise. Now the College of Engineeringis modernizing that pipeline with a $15 million redesign that will put industry-grade tools in students' hands and trains them to step straight into high-demand roles.

Fueling the comprehensive redesign is a $2.27 million equipment grant from the U.S. Economic Development Administration, whose investment illustrates the engineering college's importance in a sector that has, in recent years, shifted from aircraft manufacturing to spaceflight and satellite production.

CSULB's aerospace programwas just named No. 3 in the nation among non-doctoral programs by U.S. News & World Report, part of a strong showing that also saw civil engineeringrank No. 6, computer engineeringrank No. 11 and the entire college rank No. 26 overall. Meanwhile, seven engineering programs earned full reaccreditation this fall, with biomedical engineering achieving its initial accreditation - clear markers of quality at a time of rising demand for industry talent.

"What excites me most about the College of Engineering is how it continually grows, evolves and achieves," said Dean Jinny Rhee, noting that its top-notch faculty, programs and research are vital to student success and industry innovation. Established in 1957 - the same year the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1, marking the start of the space age - the college enrolls some 5,000 students annually and is a trusted supplier of engineering talentto the region's aerospace and advanced manufacturing sectors. "We push frontiers in student success programming, emerging curricula and research," she said.

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The Beach Rocket Lab, pictured here, is one of a slate of labs within the College of Engineering set to be upgraded and expanded beginning in 2026. Among the new facilities will be a dedicated home for SharkSat - a student-led satellite project designed to monitor blue light pollution from space and selected by NASA to launch as early as next year. Some satellite components require "clean rooms" to ensure they remain free of airborne particulates.

Set to break ground in 2026, the college's renovation will upgrade existing labs while adding a few new ones. Plans include a clean room for satellite development; a wet lab for biotechnology, chemical engineering and materials research; space for a new drone cage; a refreshed rocket laband an expanded additive manufacturing lab with metal 3D printing, circuit board printing and bioprinting.

The federal equipment grant, which narrows the remaining funding gap for the modernization, was secured with written support from the city and several regional employers, who pledged internships and career roles for CSULB grads.

Executives from two of those companies joined Long Beach Mayor Rex Richardson at a campus announcement and panel discussion Oct. 20 to highlight the city-campus-employer partnership behind the grant.

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Rhee is joined by Richardson, left, and VAST Chief People Officer Karin Kuo for a panel discussion. The city and several regional employers, including VAST, provided written support for a $2.27 million grant recently received by the College of Engineering.

Indeed, Long Beach's Rocket Lab is among the most country's most active rocket-launch providers, and Vast - also headquartered here - is building the world's first privately developed, free-flying space station. Other local manufacturers include Relativity Space (3D-printed rockets), SpinLaunch (kinetic launch systems), Wisk (autonomous air taxis), and one of the newest pillars of the local industry, the Nikon Advanced Manufacturing Technology Center - a 90,000-square-foot site opened in 2024 to expand aerospace, aviation and defense manufacturing. Boeing, meanwhile, remains a major local employer.

Richardson called it "an incredible cluster of space companies and defense companies that we proudly call Space Beach" and praised university leadership and college faculty for feeding the workforce so well.

"The future of Space Beach depends on the partnerships we build today, partnerships that connect our campus to our growing aerospace and space manufacturing industries," Richardson said, adding that Long Beach "couldn't be the fastest growing aerospace cluster in America without all of you."

Photo Gallery: CSULB Rocket Lab in Action

In January 2025, Beach students traveled to the Mojave Desert to conduct a static test of their rocket engine. Three months later, they returned to the same site to launch it. [Watch the launch.]

California State University, Long Beach published this content on October 22, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on October 22, 2025 at 15:20 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]