Commerce Department Deputy Secretary Paul Dabbar and NOAA Administrator Neil Jacobs, Ph.D., (fourth and third from the right, respectively) joined other leadership and partners to cut a celebratory ribbon draped across the entrance to NOAA’s newest pier and port facility in Charleston, South Carolina, July 8, 2026. (Image credit: NOAA)
Leadership from the Department of Commerce and NOAA joined partners today in celebrating the official opening of NOAA’s newest facility for marine operations, NOAA’s Charleston Port Facility. The facility, home to NOAA ships Ronald H. Brown and Nancy Foster, will enhance NOAA’s capacity to conduct critical research missions in the Atlantic.
The ships in NOAA’s Atlantic fleet collect data essential to protecting marine mammals, coral reefs and historic shipwrecks, managing commercial fisheries, producing nautical charts that help keep mariners safe, and deploy and maintain buoys that gather oceanographic and weather information and warn of tsunamis.
“Today, we cut the ribbon on an innovative, next-generation maritime home port,” said NOAA Administrator Neil Jacobs, Ph.D. “This crucial investment in our marine infrastructure will help ensure NOAA's fleet can continue to deliver the critical observations and data that protect lives, strengthen our economy, and advance our nation's security.”
In 2023, NOAA awarded $59.8 million to Manson Construction Company to renovate the agency’s pier facility in North Charleston. The renovations included demolishing the existing pier and building a new 62-by-360-foot floating pier that includes shoreside power for ships. Additional improvements include a warehouse and a small boat pier for operations. The state-of-the-art floating pier, one of the largest in the country, was successfully launched and precisely positioned earlier this year.

“This pier and facility are integral to safe and efficient research ship operations in the Atlantic,” said Rear Adm. Chad M. Cary, NOAA Corps director and NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations assistant administrator. “The new infrastructure allows both NOAA ships homeported in Charleston to once again have designated berths and better accommodate research missions in the area.“
About NOAA’s Office of Marine and Aviation Operations
NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations operates a fleet of 15 hydrographic survey, oceanographic research and fisheries survey vessels. NOAA ships operate in the U.S. and around the world. The ships are run by a combination of NOAA commissioned officers and civilian professional mariners.
Media contact
Keeley Belva, keeley.belva@noaa.gov, (240) 463-3114