When the world鈥檚 most powerful rocket blasted into the atmosphere, a UofL alumnus was watching from mission control.
Austin Marshall, 12S, 13GS, is part of the SpaceX team that launched Falcon Heavy 鈥 and it鈥檚 owner Elon Musk鈥檚 Tesla 鈥 into space in February.
鈥淚t was awesome,鈥 Marshall said. 鈥淲e all kind of had this thought in the back of our head that it might not work 鈥 even Elon said there was a 50 percent chance it could go wrong. But the more times things worked, the more excited everyone was.鈥
Marshall, who graduated from the J.B. Speed School of Engineering with an industrial engineering degree, is the mate颅rial flow planner for SpaceX. His job is essentially logistics, making sure all the parts and pieces needed to build the rockets are right where they should be, when they should be there.
鈥淩ight now building a rocket takes a long time,鈥 Marshall said. 鈥淪paceX wants to make it a really quick process, like an assembly line.鈥
Marshall, who worked in logistics for Toyota before join颅ing SpaceX, was the perfect fit to help move SpaceX toward a more automotive-type manufacturing system. Since start颅ing with the company, his role has expanded to include handling all the packaging for all the rocket parts, as well as ensuring those parts move around the company and across the country for the launches.
Marshall, who grew up in Possum Trot, Kentucky, before attending UofL, applied to SpaceX twice before joining the team.
鈥淚 wanted to work at a company that was driving things forward and at the forefront of technology,鈥 he said. 鈥淎t SpaceX, we have the smartest people on Earth working here, and we all have the same goal 鈥 something you don鈥檛 see in a lot of jobs. Here, building rockets is every颅one鈥檚 job.鈥
While Falcon Heavy was a record-setting rocket, it is just the beginning of what SpaceX has planned. 鈥淥ur number one goal for the year is to put people in space,鈥 he said.
Meanwhile, Marshall is working with his co-workers to launch their own satellite into space. After that 鈥 though still several years out 鈥 is the BFR, or Big Falcon Rocket, which is designed to be capable of carrying humans to Mars.
鈥淏FR is going to be three times the size in diameter and twice the height of Falcon Heavy. It鈥檚 going to be really intense,鈥 Marshall said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be a whole different experience for SpaceX.鈥
Marshall is playing an integral role in the BFR design process as the logistics manager. His time at Speed School, particularly his engineer颅ing co-ops, prepared him well for the fast-pace of SpaceX. But it was a freshman year calculus class that gave Marshall his best experience.
鈥淥ur teachers really taught us to keep work颅ing and solve problems that shouldn鈥檛 be able to be solved,鈥 he said.
That determination fits right into the mantra at SpaceX, where they are expanding the limits of space travel.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a dream job, being able to work on some颅thing that鈥檚 going to go into space,鈥 Marshall said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely one of those jobs you don鈥檛 mind waking up for every day.鈥




















