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Drones: Industry & Defence
7JUN

Arsenal-1 opens months early in Columbus

3 min read
11:27UTC

The 5-million-square-foot Arsenal-1 facility, backed by Ohio's largest-ever single employer incentive, will begin producing Fury autonomous combat aircraft before the Pentagon selects a CCA winner.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Arsenal-1 repositions Anduril as a tier-1 prime contractor — scale manufacturing is the new competitive moat.

Anduril's Arsenal-1 manufacturing facility in Columbus, Ohio will begin production "in a matter of days" — months ahead of its announced July 2026 opening 1. The 5-million-square-foot plant sits on a 500-acre site near Rickenbacker International Airport. A $310 million JobsOhio grant backs the project — the state's largest single incentive package — with 4,000 jobs promised 2.

The first product off the line: the YFQ-44A Fury, Anduril's entry in the Air Force's Collaborative Combat Aircraft competition. Jason Levin, Anduril's SVP of Engineering, said the facility will produce "YFQ-44s at rate, but also many other Anduril products" 3.

Anduril was founded in 2017. Nine years later, it is building out manufacturing floor space that exceeds most legacy defence contractors' individual plants. The acceleration from announced timeline to production suggests a company that has structured its build-out around speed — a contrast with the multi-year facility programmes typical of established primes. Ohio's $310 million incentive, its largest ever for a single employer, is one measure of how aggressively US states are competing for defence manufacturing capacity as Pentagon procurement shifts toward newer entrants.

The timing carries competitive weight. Anduril faces General Atomics and Northrop Grumman for the initial CCA production contract, with a decision expected this fiscal year. Having a factory producing Fury airframes before that decision is a manufacturing readiness demonstration that planned future capacity, however credible, cannot fully replicate.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Anduril has built a factory the size of 87 football pitches in Ohio, and it is opening ahead of schedule. The state of Ohio contributed over $300 million to support its construction because it will employ 4,000 people. The first products will be autonomous military aircraft, but the facility is designed to manufacture many different Anduril weapons systems. This matters because it signals a fundamental shift in who makes America's weapons. Traditionally, a handful of giant defence companies — Lockheed, Northrop, Raytheon — dominated military manufacturing. Anduril, founded only in 2017, now operates a facility that rivals theirs in scale, and it got there faster than any of them have expanded in decades.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

Arsenal-1's 5-million-square-foot scale exceeds any single product's foreseeable demand, and the confirmation that it will produce many other Anduril products reveals the factory as a platform for industrial diversification rather than a programme-specific asset. This mirrors SpaceX's Starbase strategy: proprietary scale manufacturing creates a cost structure that incumbent prime contractors, operating through fragmented subcontractor networks, structurally cannot replicate at equivalent per-unit economics.

Root Causes

The $310M JobsOhio grant reflects a structural shift in US industrial policy not addressed in the body: states are now competing aggressively for defence manufacturing through direct subsidy, mirroring the semiconductor incentive architecture of the CHIPS Act. This pattern — federal acquisition increasingly shaped by state-level industrial competition — is accelerating the geographic consolidation of defence manufacturing capacity in subsidy-competitive states.

Escalation

The months-early opening implies Anduril received sufficient advance commitment — either confirmed orders or high-confidence forecast demand — to justify accelerating capital deployment ahead of the announced schedule. The CCA source selection expected this fiscal year creates a hard deadline: production readiness demonstrated before the award is a material competitive argument in source selection evaluation.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    A defence tech firm founded in 2017 now operates America's largest single job-creation manufacturing investment, demonstrating that the traditional prime contractor model can be bypassed through integrated capital and manufacturing strategy.

    Immediate · Reported
  • Opportunity

    Arsenal-1 positions Anduril to bid the lowest per-unit cost in follow-on CCA and counter-UAS production contracts, where manufacturing scale rather than development heritage determines competitive position.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Single-site concentration of critical autonomous weapons production creates a supply chain vulnerability — a natural disaster, labour action, or facility incident would disrupt the entire production line simultaneously.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Traditional primes face structural margin compression as Arsenal-1 reaches capacity utilisation and Anduril's per-unit economics fall below those achievable through subcontractor-dependent production models.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #2 · UK startup tops Pentagon's drone gauntlet

Defense One· 19 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Arsenal-1 opens months early in Columbus
A defence startup founded in 2017 is opening one of the largest new weapons manufacturing facilities in the US months ahead of schedule, backed by $310 million in state funding. The early production start gives Anduril a manufacturing readiness argument in the CCA competition that its legacy competitors have not publicly matched.
Different Perspectives
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark accepted Fire Point's Skrydstrup plant after committing to bilateral defence co-production at the B9 Nordic summit in May; the facility sits beside a Danish F-35 base, sharing security perimeters. NATO has published no legal guidance on whether hosting Ukrainian weapons production converts Denmark into a co-belligerent, leaving the host-state obligation unresolved.
Russian Ministry of Defence
Russian Ministry of Defence
Russia's 117% YoY drone-output rise in April, accelerating from a 68% full-year 2025 baseline, validates the FPV mass-production doctrine and hands Moscow a cleaner targeting argument for the Skrydstrup plant than any hidden production line offered; a Ukrainian weapons facility on NATO sovereign territory is a legitimate military target under the laws of armed conflict.
Baltic NATO states (Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania)
Baltic NATO states (Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania)
Latvia deployed mobile drone-intercept teams on 29 May using domestic Origin Robotics and Eraser interceptors, the first kinetic Baltic border response to Russia's 117% output surge. The Baltic states are the primary target market for Ukraine's ten EU export offices, giving them direct commercial access to combat-tested interceptors their own manufacturers have not yet matched.
Pentagon / Joint Interagency Task Force 401
Pentagon / Joint Interagency Task Force 401
Two Ukrainian entrants in Drone Dominance Phase 2 and Red Cat's SEC-filed STE partnership bring combat-iterated Ukrainian designs into US procurement without triggering Foreign Military Sale approvals; the programme's performance-scoring methodology does not require US-origin hardware. Northrop holding the Common UAS Payload standard means a heritage prime captures interface revenue regardless of which startup airframe wins.
Ukrainian defence industry (Fire Point / Spetstechnoexport)
Ukrainian defence industry (Fire Point / Spetstechnoexport)
Fire Point's Skrydstrup construction start and Spetstechnoexport's Red Cat partnership execute Zelensky's 13 May Bucharest proposal: converting wartime production surplus into a state export apparatus, independent of US approval chains. For Ukraine, embedded manufacturing on NATO soil protects propellant supply from Russian strikes while generating hard currency the war effort needs.
Chinese drone manufacturers (DJI, Autel)
Chinese drone manufacturers (DJI, Autel)
Autel's Ralls Corp Fifth Amendment filing and DJI's Ninth Circuit quantification of USD 1.56 billion in 2026 losses are parallel constitutional attacks on a classified-evidence exclusion mechanism; neither company can contest the intelligence allegations directly, so both are betting on due-process doctrine to reopen the FCC authorisation route.