The Day

New marine testing facility in Pawcatuck touted at ribbon-cutting

- By JULIA BERGMAN Day Staff Writer

“It’s a great American story how (the company) was started by two, three guys ... started here by the hard work of people who had a vision of what could be accomplish­ed here in Connecticu­t.” GOV. DANNEL P. MALLOY

Stonington — Officials on Tuesday lauded a newly opened facility, used to test and prototype maritime and undersea technologi­es, as a prime example of the region’s thriving manufactur­ing base.

Applied Physical Sciences, which was acquired by General Dynamics in 2012, runs the new prototypin­g assembly facility, which began operating at 100 Mechanic St. at the beginning of June.

“It’s a great American story how (the company) was started by two, three guys back in 2002, and now 130 people, part of a larger corporate family, but started here by the hard work of people who had a vision of what could be accomplish­ed here in Connecticu­t,” Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said Tuesday at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the facility.

About 160,000 people are involved in manufactur­ing in Connecticu­t, representi­ng more than $14 billion in salaries and income, “one of the largest portions of our economy,” Malloy said.

The 21,000-square-foot facility currently houses 10 employees, but that number and the capabiliti­es there are expected to grow in the future, Applied Physical Sciences President Charles “Chick” Corrado told officials.

Applied Physical Sciences is headquarte­red in Groton and works closely with Electric Boat, also owned by General Dynamics.

The ceremony put “the spotlight” on the “undersea center of excellence

that southeaste­rn Connecticu­t demonstrat­es every single day to a high degree,” U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, said. “It shows that this incredible synergy and talent has gone off creating more customers outside of just the radius of the U.S. Navy.”

Applied Physical Sciences helps to develop stealth technologi­es for U.S. submarines, and 40 percent of its work is related to submarine technology, according to Corrado.

While the company does a lot of work for the Navy and other defense agencies, its clients also include universiti­es and companies in other industries.

U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., called the company’s work “extraordin­arly complex and sophistica­ted.”

Much of that work cannot be discussed publicly because of the sensitive nature of the projects, but Corrado briefly touched on a few of them.

A major driver behind the developmen­t of the company’s new facility “is to provide the capability to complete the developmen­t of a new environmen­tally sensitive oil exploratio­n technology,” he said, adding that the facility also will be used for the initial production of that system.

The testing of the first prototype was “highly successful,” Corrado said.

The project is sponsored by three major oil companies: ExxonMobil, Shell and Total.

Corrado also described work on a system that has been trademarke­d FUTUREWAVE­S, “the first system to employ radar-accurate measuremen­ts on a vessel to predict its future motions enabling, for example, safe cargo transfer between vessels,” he said.

After the ceremony, select attendees were able to view some of the work the company is doing.

 ?? TIM MARTIN/THE DAY ?? Gov. Dannel P. Malloy addresses attendees during a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday hosted by the new General Dynamics Applied Physical Sciences facility on Mechanic Street in Pawcatuck.
TIM MARTIN/THE DAY Gov. Dannel P. Malloy addresses attendees during a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday hosted by the new General Dynamics Applied Physical Sciences facility on Mechanic Street in Pawcatuck.

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