OKLAHOMA CITY (OBV) — The Oklahoma Space Industry Development Authority (OSIDA) on Tuesday unveiled a new name and brand for its flagship Burns Flat facility, rebranding the Clinton-Sherman Industrial Airpark as “Infinity One Oklahoma Spaceport.”
State officials said the “Infinity One” name traces back to the Federal Aviation Administration’s original designation for the site’s space launch corridor when the facility was approved for a spaceport license—described by OSIDA as the first inland launch facility in the United States to receive that license.
The rebrand was described as a milestone tied to Senate Bill 912, which merged OSIDA with the Oklahoma Department of Aerospace and Aeronautics (ODAA) in July 2025 in an effort to streamline operations and accelerate aerospace industry growth in Oklahoma.
“Infinity One is Oklahoma’s beacon of aerospace innovation,” said Grayson Ardies, OSIDA CEO and ODAA executive director, adding that the new name reflects “the potential, refinements, and upgrades being realized at the spaceport.”
Unlike many spaceports governed by local municipalities, Infinity One is managed by OSIDA at the state level, which the agency said can reduce friction for tenants and prospects in areas such as funding, permitting and workforce development.
OSIDA said the unveiling coincides with a broader OSIDA rebrand—new visuals, messaging and updated mission/vision/values—intended to strengthen recruitment of aerospace investment and tenants.
Lt. Gov. Matt Pinnell pointed to the state’s broader competitiveness—taxes, incentives, cost of living and education pipelines—and cited a recent agreement with Dawn Aerospace, which officials said plans to base its U.S. operations at Infinity One and begin suborbital space flights in 2027.
OSIDA said Infinity One spans 2,700 acres and includes a 13,503-foot by 300-foot all-weather concrete runway, along with on-site utilities, an air traffic control tower, a CareerTech facility and other amenities.
Officials said OSIDA and Infinity One debuted the new brands publicly April 13–16 at the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, with a new website and additional promotional materials expected soon.











