News Release
Keel Laid for First Joint High Speed Vessel
By Team Ships Public Affairs
7/22/2010 - The Army and Navy authenticated the keel for the
future U.S. Army Vessel (USAV) Spearhead July 22, at the Austal
USA shipyard in Mobile, Ala., symbolically recognizing the
beginning of ship construction. Spearhead (JHSV 1) is the first
ship to be built as part of the Department of Defense's Joint
High Speed Vessel program, managed by the Navy's Program
Executive Office (PEO) Ships. Though in development for less
than four years - a relatively brief time for a major
acquisition program - the ship underwent a rigorous production
review process prior to the start of construction, where the
ship's design maturity, the availability of materials and
components, and the shipbuilder's ability to successfully start
fabrication were all closely evaluated.
"Our commitment to fully maturing the design prior to the start
of construction has already paid huge dividends," said Capt.
George Sutton, Strategic and Theater Sealift program manager for
PEO Ships. "Additionally, the use of proven commercial
technologies and the shipbuilder's improvements to their
production processes have paved the way for an already very
successful program." This commercially designed, non-combatant
vessel leverages commercial technology and merges the previous
Army Theater Support Vessel and the Navy High Speed Connector to
decrease costs by taking advantage of the inherent commonality
between the existing programs. Leveraging the Navy's extensive
experience in surface ship acquisition, PEO Ships has taken the
lead on acquisition of both the Army and Navy high speed
transport vessels. The future USAV Spearhead is expected to be
delivered to the Army's 7th Sustainment Brigade in FY 2012. The
second ship of the class, the future USNS Vigilant, will be
delivered to the Navy the following year.
"The JHSV's aggressive and streamlined acquisition process and
the service's ability to leverage commercial investments has
allowed us to provide a more maneuverable and flexible vessel to
our warfighters," said Col. R. Eric Fletcher, the Army's project
manager for Force Projection. "As a multi-use platform, the JHSV
will provide our nation's warfighters with the capabilities to
operate in a variety of missions, across the globe."
The vessels will be used for fast intra-theater transportation
of troops, military vehicles and equipment for missions ranging
from contingency operations and humanitarian assistance, to
disaster relief and emerging seabasing concepts in austere port
environments. The ships will be capable of transporting 600
short tons 1,200 nautical miles at an average speed of 35 knots.
They will be capable of operating in shallow-draft ports and
waterways, interfacing with roll-on/roll-off discharge
facilities, and on/off-loading a combat-loaded Abrams Main
Battle Tank (M1A2). Other joint requirements include an aviation
flight deck to support day and night air vehicle launch and
recovery operations. To further improve production efficiencies,
JHSV shipbuilder Austal has constructed a Modular Manufacturing
Facility (MMF), completed in November 2009, which provides a
five-fold increase in existing capacity and reduces construction
duration.
PEO Ships is responsible for the development and acquisition of
U.S. Navy surface ships, and is currently managing the design
and construction of 10 major surface ships classes and small
boats and craft. The PEO is committed to ensuring that prior to
the start of ship construction, each program completes an
exhaustive Production Readiness Review (PRR) to demonstrate that
design is mature and the requirements are well understood. Fully
maturing the design prior to the start of construction is one of
a number of initiatives the PEO is undertaking to reduce costs
in shipbuilding.