WASHINGTON โ€” Alliant Tech Systems, the Salt Lake City-based contractor that is increasingly looking for ways to expand beyond its well-known core business building space shuttle solid-rocket boosters, announced Nov. 8 that it has joined the Rocketp lane Kistler team developing a space station resupply vehicle.

Rocketp lane Kistler was one of two companies selected in August to receive financial assistance under the Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program, a NASA effort to develop and demonstrate a launch system capable of delivering supplies and possibly even astronauts to the international space station.

โ€œWe look forward to helping [Rocketplane Kistler] develop this new launch capability,โ€ said ATK Launch Systems Group President Ron Dittemore.

Dittemore said ATK will oversee the development, assembly, integration and testing of the K-1 reusable rocket and construction of its Woomera, Australia, launch site. ATK also will support Seattle-based Andrews Space in its development of the K-1 crew and cargo module, lending its expertise in composite structures.

ATK held a simil ar supporting role on Andrews COTS team, which was a finalist for NASA funding but did not make the final cut.

Dittemore said ATK also has agreed to make an initial cash investment of $2.5 million in Rocketplane Kistler to help finance the restart of the K-1 program. Additional investments in the form of goods and services would follow, Dittemore said .

ATKโ€™s addition to the Rocketplane Kistler team largely displaces Italyโ€™s Alenia Spazio, at least in the near term. Rocketplane Kistler President Randy Brinkley said ATK will be doing the structures work originally envisioned for Alenia. He said, however, that R ocketplane Kistler remains interested in working with Alenia on some longer-term objectives, such as developing a life support system for a K-1 crew module and an active payload dispenser for a version of the K-1 that would be optimized to launch satellites.

Brinkley said Rocketplane Kistler still intends to assemble the K-1 at Lockheed Martinโ€™s Michoud Assembly Facility near New Orleans, although that work also will fall under ATKโ€™s supervision. Michoud currently manufactures external tanks for the space shuttle and is expected to play a major role in the production of the Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle and Ares 1 rocket.

ATK was selected by NASA in December 2005 to help design and build the Ares 1 main stage, essentially a larger version of the solid-rocket boosters the company builds for the space shuttle. In September, ATK announced it was joining with Lockheed Martin and Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne to compete for a contract to help NASA design and build a cryogenic upper stage for the Ares 1.

Dittemore said joining Rocketplane Kistlerโ€™s COTS team would not distract ATK from its shuttle or Ares work. He said ATKโ€™s work on the K-1 would be led by the companyโ€™s Advanced Programs Group under former NASA astronaut Kent Romminger, not the Space Launch Systems Group under Michael Kahn.

ATK fills a vacancy in Rocketplane Kistlerโ€™s COTS team roster that has been open since Dulles, Va.-based Orbital Sciences pulled out of the project in September over disagreements about the design and business plan for the K-1 reusable rocket.

While ATKโ€™s initial cash investment is less than the $10 million Orbital Sciences had pledged to bring to the table, Brinkley said Rocketplane Kistler has exceeded its first round financing goals by 10 percent, raising over $45 million since NASA awarded the company $207 million in September under the COTS program.

Brinkley has said Rocketplane Kistler intends to match NASAโ€™s contribution two-for-one with private investment to complete development of the K-1 and conduct by 2010 the COTS demonstrations that would put the company in the running for eventual space station re supply contracts.