U.S. Coast Guard Yard

​​Mission and Vision St​atement
Missi​​on​: "​To be the shipyard and marine maintenance facility of ​​
choice."
Vision: 
"Value: We shall meet our customer's needs with the maximum value in product and service, on time and at a c​ompetitive price. We shall continually improve o​ur total quality. We shall use innovative solutions to ensure we consistently provide value to the Coast Guard.
Workforce We will promote safety, trust, integrity, equality, recognition, and mutual respect. We shall continue to ensure a ​​​​​​​​​stable work environment for our employees by matching the skills and expertise of our workforce to the needs of the Coast Guard. We shall provide and efficiently manage the infrastructure to ensure our employees and tenants have the best possible tools and facilities.
Relationships We shall establish effective partnerships with our internal and external suppliers, partners and customers that enable us to improve quality, lower costs and meet schedule. We shall effectively deliver and increase the core expertise valued by our support partners to serve the fleet.
Community We shall positively represent the Coast Guard as responsible neighbors within the local community and by demonstrating leadership in all areas of the marine repair industry, including environmental management. Through our environmental stewardship, we shall leverage improvement in all of our business processes."​​
​(Source: U.S. Coast Guard Yard Website​)

History and General Information

Located in northern Anne Arundel County and southern Baltimore City, Maryland, the 113-acre U.S. Coast Guard Yard (Yard) is the Coast Guard's sole shipbuilding and major repair facility. For more than 120 years, the Yard has designed, built, maintained, and renovated Coast Guard, Navy, Army, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), state and local government, and foreign military vessels.1 Notably, it is one of five federal shipyards and the only one that is under the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The Coast Guard was moved to DHS in 2003 after being a part of the Department of Transportation from 1967 to 2002. Prior to 1967, the Coast Guard was a military service under the Department of the Navy (DoN).

The Coast Guard is unique in that it can change the service under which it operates. Officially, the Coast Guard is identified under 10 U.S.C. § 101 as one of the six uniformed services that make up the U.S. Armed Forces, although under the direction of the DHS. Under 14 U.S.C. § 3​, upon declaration of war by Congress, or when the President directs, the Coast Guard operates under the DoD as a military service in the DoN.

Originally named the Arundel Cove Depot, the Yard was established in 1899 as a training academy and boat building and repair station. Throughout the early 1900s, the Coast Guard consistently improved facilities to expand its capabilities. When the United States joined World War I in 1917, the Coast Guard became a part of the U.S. Navy, and several Navy units were sent to the Depot to assist with vessel repairs and conversions.2

World War II necessitated extensive expansion of the Depot to meet war demands, including a 3,000-ton floating dry dock, two shipways, and a large concrete pier with a tower crane. The Depot expanded in size to be comparable with a medium-sized Naval Shipyard, and became officially designated as the U.S. Coast Guard Yard. Work at this time included repairs, buoy manufacturing, production of canvas work for the Coast Guard, and boat construction. Wartime training added to the population at the Yard, which included civilian workers and military personnel.

The Yard saw a significant reduction in workforce between World War II and the Korean Conflict. During this time, little new ship construction was undertaken, and the focus shifted to vessel overhaul and repair work, buoy construction, and other miscellaneous manufacturing activities. The Yard became very active in steel utility boat construction in the years following the Korean Conflict. The commissioned vessel and cutter construction activity during this time was a contributing factor to the growth and expansion of the Coast Guard fleet over the decades.

Present day activities of the Yard focus on renovating vessels and back-fit engineering to install upgraded technology packages and other vessel improvements, leveraging the Yard's unique mix of in-house professional engineers and the technical expertise of its stable waterfront production workforce. Examples of this renovation and retrofit work include the following long-term programs:

  • Service Life Extension Program (SLEP): Addresses specific systems and major maintenance to extend the service life of the vessel beyond the original design service life. A SLEP is not designed to increase a ship's capability; it only extends the service life of the cutter by replacing obsolete, unsupportable or maintenance-intensive equipment and by seeking standardization of configuration issues. A SLEP on the 140' Icebreaking Tug/Bay Class was completed in August 2020 at the Yard and Phase II is being completed on “road shows”. SLEP of the 270' Famous Class, the Naval Academy Training Vessels, and CGC Polar Star is underway.
  • Recurring Depot Availability Program (RDAP): The RDAP is a four-year recurring maintenance cycle for the Coast Guard's 87-foot Atlantic Area Coastal Patrol Boats that began in 2014 and is now in Phase II. The Yard's execution of the program reduced maintenance costs by 28%, resulting in a savings of $3M in taxpayer funds and increasing the availability of the patrol boat fleet by 120 days per year. The Coast Guard will launch a similar program for the 154' Sentinel-Class Patrol Boat at the Yard.
  • Major Maintenance Availability (MMA): A planned part of a cutter's life cycle. Design service life is established with an understanding that a major overhaul will be completed over the midpoint of the cutters service life. The 12-month MMA of fourteen 210-foot medium endurance cutters (WMECs) conducted from 1984-1998 extended their service life.. Extension of viable service life was achieved through replacement of major systems and upgrade of hull structures. The work was done for less than one-third the cost of constructing a new cutter of similar size and capability. MMA's are currently in process for the 225' Seagoing Buoy Tender/Juniper Class.
Beyond servicing the U.S. Coast Guard Fleet, the Yard has a long-term agreement to service the U.S. Naval Academy's Yard Patrol Fleet. Foreign military sales of decommissioned Coast Guard cutters, which are reactivated and converted to patrol boats, are also present-day Yard activities.3 The Yard also refurbishes reactivated 110' and 87' cutters sold to allied nations as part of the Coast Guard's Foreign Military Sales Program.

Watch an overview video of the Coast Guard Yard.

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Compatible Use Organizations, Programs, and Resources

For more information on how the Yard works with surrounding communities to build strong and mutually beneficial relationships, you can explore compatible use organizations, programs, and resources.

​Community Resources to Promote Compatibility

Military installations and their host communities have strong and mutually beneficial relationships. They rely on and support one another in terms of jobs, housing, schools, recreation, infrastructure, and social services. Communication, coordination, and partnerships that support compatible community development can create mutually beneficial results to ensure support for warfighters and their families, military operations, and continued community growth and economic development.
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​​​Economic Resources to Promote Compatibility
A jurisdiction's economic development office and support organizations offer a variety of resources that help the community seek out economic growth opportunities and strengthen existing businesses. These resources are particularly valuable for defense communities who are continually looking for ways to attract new business, retain a skilled workforce, and provide resources and opportunities for military families relocating to the area.

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1 The Yard: USCG Shipyard Curtis Bay’s Storied Past and Vital Future. Defense Media Network.
2 Maryland Defense Agency Profile. Maryland Department of Commerce. US Coast Guard Yard.
3 USGC Yard Ten Year Strategy. USCG. USCG Yard Ten Year Strategy.​​​​​​​​
4 FY ​2021 Economic Impact of Maryland's Military Installatio​ns and the Associated Defense Ecosystem. Maryland Department of Commerce. FY 2021 Economic Impact of Maryland's Military Installations and the Associated Defense Ecosystem.​​
5 Ibid. ​

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Contact

Public Affairs Office
2401 Hawkins Point Road Bldg. 1
Baltimore, MD 21226

Phone: 410-636-7238​