I don’t have live tool access right now to pull the latest news directly. Here’s a concise summary based on publicly known information up to 2025 and common reporting patterns, along with guidance on how to verify the very latest updates.
Direct answer
- SpaceX Landing Zone 4 (LZ-4) at Vandenberg Space Force Base remains an active landing site used for Falcon 9 landings, with its role historically tied to supporting missions launched from Space Launch Complex 4-East. For the very latest news, please check SpaceX’s official updates or recent Spaceflight Now/Yahoo News coverage, as operational details can shift with mission schedules and base activity.
Key background
- Location and purpose: LZ-4 is SpaceX’s dedicated landing zone adjacent to SLC-4E at Vandenberg AFB, California, used for returning Falcon 9 first stages from west-coast launches. This facility forms part of a dual-pad setup at Space Launch Complex 4, with one pad for launch and LZ-4 for landings.[2]
- Operational history: LZ-4 began service around 2018 and has since hosted numerous Falcon 9 landings, including missions returning boosters to Vandenberg after West Coast launches. Spaceflight Now has covered multiple LZ-4 landings tied to various missions from SLC-4E/4-East.[1][3]
- Context with other sites: SpaceX has pursued additional landing and launch infrastructure elsewhere (e.g., Florida’s Space Coast) to bolster capacity, but LZ-4 remains the West Coast landing node associated with SLC-4 operations.[4]
What to check for the latest
- SpaceX official channels: press releases, blog posts, and social updates about LZ-4 operations or any changes to landing site assignments.
- Spaceflight Now and Space.com: recent mission reports listing where boosters landed and any reconfiguration of landing zones at Vandenberg or Cape Canaveral.
- Wikipedia and data aggregators: can reflect recent mission logs but verify with primary sources for critical details.
If you’d like, I can:
- Pull the very latest headlines and extract the key facts (dates, missions, boosters, landing outcomes) and present them in a quick bullet list.
- Set up a brief comparison of LZ-4 with other SpaceX landing zones (e.g., LZ-1, LZ-2, and Cape Canaveral landings) to illustrate how LZ-4 fits into SpaceX’s broader landing architecture.
Would you like me to fetch the latest headlines and summarize them for you? If so, tell me if you prefer a short bullet list or a compact table. I can also tailor the sources to SpaceX’s site, Spaceflight Now, or Space.com.