Founded 1978Beltsville, Maryland

Swales & Associates, Inc.

Swales & Associates, Inc., doing business as Swales Aerospace, is an aerospace engineering firm based in Maryland. It is employee-owned through an ESOP.
Active today
Founded
1978
Employees
925
Sales
$180M
Exchange
Website
No active website
Founded in 1978, Swales Aerospace is an employee-owned, small business aerospace engineering firm. This pride-of-ownership culture is reflected in the quality and dedication of our work. During our 25-year history, Swales has offered a full range of aerospace engineering services. We are the global leader in the development and manufacture of two-phase thermal solutions for spaceflight applications, and we are a small satellite mission provider. Our mission is to provide excellence in engineering in a cost-effective and responsive manner with professionalism and integrity to our customers. Our customers include civil, commercial, and national security.Company Perspectives
§ 01

The story

1978–1998

Swales & Associates, Inc., doing business as Swales Aerospace, is an aerospace engineering firm based in Maryland. It is employee-owned through an ESOP. Swales does some manufacturing of aerospace-related products, specializing in structural and thermal management systems--ways to control movement and heat in satellites. Facilities are located in Virginia, Florida, Texas, California, and Maryland, home of the Goddard Space Flight Center. NASA accounts for about 75 percent of business. The U.S. Department of Defense is another key customer. The company has participated in programs such as the Hubble Space Telescope and the International Space Station and has begun producing its own small satellites.

Beltsville Origins

Swales was established in Beltsville, Maryland, on April 17, 1978. Company founder Tom Swales was the first president and CEO. Future CEO Tom Wilson was director of business development. Both Swales and Wilson had structural analysis engineering backgrounds. Ron Luzier, originally senior vice-president and chief engineer, and later chief technology officer, joined Swales and Wilson in founding the company.

The company began with ten employees overall and originally worked from an office at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, where it provided analysis for the Hubble Space Telescope. After occupying space at the Maryland Federal Savings and Loan Building and the Nationwide Insurance Building in Greenbelt, Maryland, in 1985 Swales moved into a half-floor suite in the Paulen Industrial Center. It eventually expanded into 18 buildings at the site.

Acquisition Drive Beginning in 1995

Swales set out on an acquisition drive in 1995. Around the same time, it ventured from pure engineering to manufacturing satellite hardware and tools for astronauts, such as a popular power wrench. Revenues exceeded $75 million in 1997. Swales then had 700 employees and was growing quickly. Among other projects, the company was manufacturing components for the International Space Station's thermal control system.

Welch Engineering Ltd. of Pasadena, California, was acquired in December 1998. Welch strengthened Swales's control systems offerings, Tom Wilson told the Washington Business Journal. The Pasadena location was convenient to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Welch also had an office in Rockville, Maryland, and about 40 employees.

Big Contracts in 2000 Sales were $90 million in 2000.

1999–2002

NASA accounted for 70 percent of business. In the late 1990s Swales designed an instrument package for NASA's Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE). FUSE sought to probe wavelengths that had not yet been observed in a quest to help understand the origins of the universe. According to Space Business News, Swales was transferring technology from the FUSE project to the Naval EarthMap Observer (NEMO) remote sensing-satellite.

A team led by Swales was awarded the rights to commercialize NASA's Small Explorer-Lite (SMEX-Lite) spacecraft technology in 1999. AlliedSignal Technical Services Corp. and Hammers Co. were partners in the venture. Swales was prime contractor on the Earth Observer One (EO1), a small satellite launched in November 2001. Swales was also one of three companies NASA chose in 2000 to develop lightweight spacecraft, new conductivity materials, and other technologies.

Big Contracts in 2000

Sales were $90 million in 2000. The company had never had an annual loss, Wilson told the Washington Post, because it kept to its engineering niche. Employment hovered at around 800 people. In November of that year, Swales wrested a five-year, $240 million NASA contract from its much larger local rival Federal Data Corp. (later acquired by Northrop Grumman). This contract related to NASA's Langley Research Center. It was soon followed up with a $350 million deal supporting the Goddard Space Flight Center for five years. In both cases, Swales led a team of subcontractors.

NASA accounted for most of the company's revenues. After the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks against the United States, updating aging defense satellites became a national priority. Defense-related work was soon accounting for about 10 percent of revenues.

In October 2001 Swales acquired most of the assets of Dynatherm, a Hunt Valley, Maryland developer of thermal management systems, from Pressure Systems Inc. of California, which had bought the company three years earlier. Around the same time as the Dynatherm purchase, Swales opened an office in El Segundo, California, to be more accessible to the commercial aerospace industry near Los Angeles. The company also had a new engineering center on Merritt Island, Florida, near Cape Canaveral and the John F. Kennedy Space Center.

Swales opened an office near Houston's Johnson Space Center in early 2002. The company's Beltsville, Maryland site was expanded later in the year with the addition of a 34,000-square-foot office and production facility, bringing its total space there to more than 220,000 square feet. Revenues were $157 million for 2002.

2002–2003

NASA was farming out more of its engineering work in order to reduce its staffing levels, noted the Daily Press of Newport News, Virginia. Swales was one of the three largest contractors for NASA's Langley, Virginia facility. Still, with about 900 employees (125 of them at Langley, according to the Daily Press), it was not too large to compete as a small business, which conveyed certain advantages in the bidding process. In 2002, Swales took over the lead contractor position in a $225 million, five-year contract to provide NASA Langley with Systems Analysis and Mission Support (SAMS), displacing previous agreements held by giant Lockheed Martin and Federal Data Corp.

Among the company's high-tech projects was computer simulation work for a powerful hypersonic aircraft engine. Swales was also a partner on a Boeing-led team contracted by NASA to develop nuclear electric power systems deep space exploration. These used electric thrusters powered by nuclear reactors.

The company continued to support the Hubble Space Telescope by participating in repair missions. Swales designed more efficient solar arrays for the Hubble and developed a cooling system for the Hubble's Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS).

A New Drill in 2002

Swales seemed likely to benefit from President George W. Bush's proposal to put an American on Mars. One relevant technology being tested was a low-energy dry drilling instrument designed to probe for water under the Martian surface. In a 2002 field test, the device drilled ten meters into Arizona sandstone without requiring repairs or a bit change. After slipping $4 million to $140 million in 2002, revenues rose to $157 million in 2003.

An important new product was the SCONCE secondary carrier. It allowed small payloads to share a launch with larger ones. SCONCE successfully launched an experimental micro-satellite from an Air Force rocket in May 2003. Its cost savings suggested commercial potential.

Aavid Thermalloy, LLC joined Swales in an alliance to commercialize advanced electronic cooling systems that Swales had developed in thermal management work for government satellite programs. Aavid, the world leader in thermal management for electronics, brought high-volume manufacturing capacity and global marketing connections to the partnership. Wilson told the Washington Post that as computer chips became faster and hotter, they could benefit from the heat pipes the company had developed to regulate the temperatures of satellite components.

2004–2006

Swales was named the primary mission assurance director for the U.S. Department of Defense's Missile Defense Agency in September 2004. Swales was supported by a team including Millennium Engineering and Integration Company and subcontractors SRS Technologies and Vanguard Research Inc. The Missile Defense Agency's main role was to develop the Ballistic Missile Defense System.

Sales were expected to exceed $180 million in 2004, when Swales employed 900 people. Expanding the company's customer base was a priority.

Swales was reorganized into four business units effective January 2005. Civil Services included engineering support for NASA customers such as Goddard Space Flight Center, Langley Research Center, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and the Johnson Space Center. Commercial Programs and Engineering Services was in charge of supplying commercial space programs with flight hardware and thermal management systems.

Swales also was participating in a space weather program called THEMIS, scheduled for launch in October 2006. THEMIS (Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions During Substorms) was designed to track disturbances in the Earth's magnetosphere using five satellites.

§ 02

The story in context

What the company didThe economyTechnologyNational history
CompanySwales is formed.
CompanySwales is formed.
1978
1979
EconomyA second oil crisis drives inflation higher worldwide.
1980
EnvironmentSuperfund makes US polluters pay for cleanup.
1981
TechnologyThe IBM PC launches and sets a standard.
1984
TechnologyApple ships the Macintosh; the GUI era begins.
1987
EconomyBlack Monday: markets fall sharply around the world.
1989
HistoryThe Berlin Wall falls; global markets open up.
1991
TechnologyThe World Wide Web is released to the public.
TechnologyLinux and open source challenge proprietary software.
1993
TechnologyThe Mosaic browser brings the web to everyone.
1994
TechnologyE-commerce begins to disrupt retail.
1995
TechnologyWindows 95 launches; the internet goes mainstream.
1997
EconomyThe Asian financial crisis rattles global markets.
EnvironmentThe Kyoto Protocol sets the first climate targets.
CompanyWelch Engineering of Pasadena is acquired.
CompanyWelch Engineering of Pasadena is acquired.
1998
TechnologyUS v. Microsoft antitrust trial reshapes software.
1999
EconomyGlass-Steagall repeal reshapes US banking.
2000
EconomyThe dot-com bubble bursts.
CompanyDynatherm is acquired; the El Segundo, California office is opened.
CompanyDynatherm is acquired; the El Segundo, California office is opened.
2001
HistoryThe September 11 attacks; a US recession follows.
CompanyThe Houston office is opened.
CompanyThe Houston office is opened.
2002
2004
TechnologySocial media and Web 2.0 take hold.
CompanySwales is reorganized into four business units.
CompanySwales is reorganized into four business units.
2005
Still active in 2026
§ 03

Related companies

Lineage: Swales & Associates, Inc. · founded 1978
Competed with
The Boeing Co.
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EADS
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Lockheed Martin Corporation
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Loral Space & Communications
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Northrop Grumman Corporation.
Active · founded 1939
Divisions
Civil Programs, Civil Services, Commercial Programs and Engineering Services, National Security Programs and Engineering Services
§ 04

Further reading

  • "Civil Expanding Commercial Profits: Working with NASA Can Pave the Way. "Civil Expanding Commercial Profits: Working with NASA Can Pave the Way," Space Business News, May 26, 1999.
  • "Civil Expanding Commercial Profits: Working with NASA Can Pave the Way. "Civil Expanding Commercial Profits: Working with NASA Can Pave the Way," Space Business News, May 26, 1999.
  • Dujardin. Dujardin, Peter, "Beltsville, Md.-Based Aerospace Firm Helps Out at Hampton, Va., NASA Facility," Daily Press (Newport News, Va.), August 23, 2002.
  • Dujardin. Dujardin, Peter, "Beltsville, Md.-Based Aerospace Firm Helps Out at Hampton, Va., NASA Facility," Daily Press (Newport News, Va.), August 23, 2002.
  • Dujardin. "NASA Research Center Taps Firms for High-Tech Program," Knight Ridder Tribune Business News, September 7, 2000.
  • Dujardin. "NASA Research Center Taps Firms for High-Tech Program," Knight Ridder Tribune Business News, September 7, 2000.
  • Gebhardt. Gebhardt, Sara, "Beltsville Firm Rockets; Swales Aerospace Wins Big-Money NASA Contracts," Washington Post, January 4, 2001, p. T5.
  • Gebhardt. Gebhardt, Sara, "Beltsville Firm Rockets; Swales Aerospace Wins Big-Money NASA Contracts," Washington Post, January 4, 2001, p. T5.
  • Hopkins. Hopkins, Jamie Smith, "Proposal to Send Humans to Mars May Mean Boost for Maryland Aerospace Industry," Baltimore Sun, January 10, 2004.
  • Hopkins. Hopkins, Jamie Smith, "Proposal to Send Humans to Mars May Mean Boost for Maryland Aerospace Industry," Baltimore Sun, January 10, 2004.
  • Jain. Jain, Aruna, "Swales Marks 25th Anniversary, Vies for More Defense Contracts," Business Gazette, May 16, 2003.
  • Jain. Jain, Aruna, "Swales Marks 25th Anniversary, Vies for More Defense Contracts," Business Gazette, May 16, 2003.
Adapted from the International Directory of Company Histories, Vol. 69 (2005).
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