SAN DIEGO, January 19, 2012 – Today General
Dynamics NASSCO hosted a keel laying ceremony for the first Mobile Landing
Platform (MLP) ship at the company’s shipyard in San Diego. Mrs. Pat
Mills was the honoree for the ceremony. She is the wife of U.S. Marine
Corps Lieutenant General Richard P. Mills, Deputy Commandant for Combat
Development and Integration.
Mrs. Mills validated the keel laying by welding her initials
into the ship’s structure. The steel plate with her initials will be
permanently affixed to the ship’s keel, remaining with the vessel throughout
its time in service.
Delivery of the first MLP ship is scheduled for May
2013. The 765-foot long ship will be used as staging areas for the Navy
and Marines. Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus recently announced that this
first MLP ship will be named Montford Point, for the North Carolina
facility where 20,000 African American Marines were trained over seven years,
starting in 1942.
“In today’s challenging fiscal environment shipbuilder’s
must continue to provide our Navy customer with competitive pricing and fair
value,” said Fred Harris, president of General Dynamics NASSCO. “With the
Mobile Landing Platform, NASSCO is meeting that challenge once again. The
Navy and Marines will be getting a ship with significant capability at
approximately one-third the cost of the Navy’s original plan.”
One initiative that NASSCO employed with this ship was to
incorporate a “design-build” approach into all phases of design and planning
development. The “design-build” approach included the assignment of the
company’s most experienced shipbuilders within functional engineering and
detail design teams. These teams played an important role in developing
build strategy initiatives that are improving the ship’s readiness for
construction, making MLP among the most producible designs in NASSCO’s history.
Once delivered to the fleet, MLP ships will join the three
Maritime Prepositioning Force squadrons that are strategically located around
the world to enable rapid response in a crisis. MLP vessels will change
the way the Maritime Prepositioning Force operates, providing a “pier at sea,”
that will become the core of the Navy/Marine Corps sea basing concept.
This capability will allow prepositioning ships to offload equipment and
supplies to the MLP for transshipment to shore by other vessels.
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