Tysons contractor to provide lifecycle logistics, readiness support
Josh Janney //April 8, 2026//
AdobeStock
AdobeStock
Tysons contractor to provide lifecycle logistics, readiness support
Josh Janney //April 8, 2026//
Tysons-based technology company LMI has received a $100 million contract from the U.S. Space Force to help it better manage and support its equipment.
Under the indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract, LMI will modernize and improve how the Space Force maintains and supports its systems, using more advanced tools and processes to keep equipment operational and ready.
According to the Department of Defense, work will be performed in Tysons and is expected to be completed by March 31, 2031. The contract is being managed by the Space Systems Command at Peterson Space Force Base in Colorado.
LMI did not immediately return requests for comment seeking additional details about the work.
At the beginning of the year, Josh Wilson succeeded Doug Wagoner as CEO of LMI. In January, the company announced several leadership appointments, including Christen Smith as chief revenue officer, Zaki Saleh as senior vice president of growth operations and Christine Cocrane as senior vice president of the health and civilian market.
Chartered under the Kennedy administration in 1961, LMI was originally formed to support logistics management for the Department of Defense. Wagoner joined LMI as its president and CEO in 2020 and oversaw the 2022 sale of its for-profit subsidiary to investment firms Declaration Partners, Capitol Meridian Partners and 22C Capital. The for-profit subsidiary retained the LMI name, and the remaining nonprofit entity was rebranded as NobleReach Foundation.
In 2020, LMI’s revenue was $397 million. In October 2025, LMI announced it had seen a 74% increase in revenue over the past five years and a 40% increase in workforce.
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