Installation Support and Programs Management

The directorate partners with USACE Major Subordinate Commands, Districts, Laboratories, Centers, Directorates of Public Works and other government agencies to provide life-cycle, world-wide support in providing maintenance, repair, operation, and upgrade services for their facilities and infrastructure. Our support is provided through the execution of more than 30 programs that encompass the technical, engineering, contracting and program management requirements of a variety of mission areas.

Our programs are executed in accordance with the Project Delivery Business Process in conjunction with the Project Management Community of Practice and focus primarily on sustainment, restoration and modernization projects and programs.

Since June 2007, ISPM has been designated the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Installation Support Technical Center of Expertise (IS-CX).We provide quality engineering and design services in areas such as electronic security/intrusion detection systems, utility monitoring and control systems and ranges and training lands management. We also provide innovative services in third party financing of energy solutions, base/facility operations, maintenance, repair and renewal of medical and non-medical facilities, furniture and furnishings and operational technology solutions for installations/facilities across the Department of Defense.

Read more about our programs on the fact sheets page or click on the program link to the right.

For more information, call 256-895-1230.

ISPM Programs

A recently renovated service control point at Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana, ensures fuel is delivered to the Air Force 2nd Bomb Wing’s stable of B-52 Stratofortresses (seen in background), a long-range heavy bomber serving as a vital component to the Air Force Global Strike Command. Huntsville Center’s Installation and Support and Programs Management DLA-Fuels program manages a maintenance and repair service program sustaining worldwide fueling capability to the Department of Defense and other agencies.
The U.S. Air Force Personnel Center at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph in Texas has been restored to its historic look. The Facilities Repair and Renewal Project was the first comprehensive renovation of the building since it was built in the 1930s.
Technicians install information technology equipment at the new U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Western Processing Center in Hillsboro, Oregon. Due to weight limitations at the Western Processing Center’s original location, all equipment had to be moved out by March 19 and in its new location and operational by March 22. Huntsville Center’s Information Technology Services ACE-IT branch supported the requirement awarding a single $1.3 million Firm Fixed Price contract to a Portland, Oregon area IT firm on Dec. 24. The work was completed within the allotted timeline and met all operational requirements.
An exterior view of the newly-unveiled Martin Army Community Hospital located at Fort Benning in Georgia. Since opening in November 2014, the hospital’s 745,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art facility improves the area’s medical capacity to provide inpatient, outpatient and ancillary services to a military community of more than 90,000 Soldiers, family members and retirees.
Bhate employees work to deconstruct a chapel - one of three buildings selected for the deconstruction pilot program - on Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. Materials from the chapel were salvaged for reuse or recycle.
Leslie Yarbrough (left), program manager, and Sara Cook, a project manager, U.S. Army Engineering and Support Center Huntsville Furnishings Program, complete a quality assurance inspection on equipment purchased as part of a $385,000 project within the Gray Eagle Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) cantonment area that included a company operations facility, tactical equipment maintenance facility, operations and storage facility, and control tower.
The Fort Irwin, California, REM developed and coordinated a 1MW concentrated solar array through the Environmental Security Test Certification Program (ESTCP). The concentrated solar array system tracks the sun to optimize exposure, which increases the efficiency of normal roof top or stand-alone photovoltaic. This project will save Fort Irwin around 2.4M kWh per year at a value of $310,000 per year and equivalent 8,392 MBTU savings.
Gate 1 at Fort Carson, Colorado, was part of a Huntsville Center Access Control Point Program project.