Liberty, Texas — On 701 acres about forty minutes from downtown Houston, BaRupOn is building something the United States has needed for a generation: a place where the things that make a nation strong are made under one roof, on one footprint, powered by one resilient backbone.
It is called LAMP — the Liberty American Multi-Sourced Power and Innovation Hub — and it represents BaRupOn’s core conviction. When power, production, and intelligence are designed to advance together, innovation stops waiting on someone else’s grid, someone else’s supply chain, or someone else’s permission.
One ecosystem, by design
LAMP is not a business park with tenants who happen to share an address. It is an ecosystem where manufacturing, key ingredients and raw materials, robotics, AI, drone manufacturing, rare-earth magnet production, and co-location all coexist — and all benefit the community around them.
That word, coexist, is the whole idea. A robotics line and an advanced-manufacturing floor draw on the same dependable power. A drone-manufacturing operation sits within reach of the key ingredients, raw materials, and rare-earth magnetics capacity that feed it. AI systems orchestrate it all, turning a collection of facilities into a single, intelligent industrial organism. Co-location turns what used to be separate, fragile links in a national supply chain into neighbors who strengthen one another.
This is what BaRupOn means by vertical integration. Most developers offer a standalone space. BaRupOn offers a system, engineered so that energy, logistics, and production reinforce each other instead of competing for scarce resources.
Power that doesn’t flinch
None of it works without power that simply does not quit. That is why BaRupOn put energy into the foundation of LAMP rather than treating it as an afterthought.
The campus is built around a multi-sourced energy architecture — natural gas, geothermal, solar, and advanced nuclear — designed to deliver continuous, high-capacity power while shielding the campus from grid instability and market swings. The master plan targets 3 gigawatts of total on-campus capacity, with an initial generation buildout of 240 MW already underway and a long-term natural gas supply arrangement with Kinder Morgan anchoring the early phases. Siemens industrial gas turbines are already part of the installed base on site.
Layered on top of that energy backbone is 4.5 million square feet of planned innovation and manufacturing space — room for the key ingredients and raw materials, the robotics and drone lines, the rare-earth magnetics work, and the applied research that ties them together.
Built for the community, not apart from it
LAMP was inspired by a simple belief: America’s next wave of innovation depends on reliable, domestically controlled infrastructure, and the communities that host that infrastructure should be the first to share in its rewards.
Liberty County is positioned to feel that directly. The campus broke ground in January 2025 and is expected to generate thousands of jobs as it scales — skilled, durable work in manufacturing, energy, robotics, and advanced industry. With direct access to US-90 and on-site rail, LAMP is engineered to move goods, talent, and opportunity through the region for decades, not quarters.
For a town that has watched American industry move offshore for forty years, LAMP signals the opposite trend: the work coming home, the supply chain rebuilt locally, and the economic stability that follows when a community becomes the place where critical technology is actually made.
A blueprint, not a one-off
Founded in 2014, BaRupOn has grown from healthcare manufacturing and federal contracting into a vertically integrated American company spanning energy, infrastructure, and advanced manufacturing. LAMP is its flagship — and, in the company’s view, a national template.
The thesis behind it is straightforward. America’s most strategic industries — defense, advanced manufacturing, and AI-driven production — can no longer afford to depend on fragile external grids and distant supply chains. They need local power, local infrastructure, and operational independence. LAMP is what that looks like when you build it on purpose.
“When power, production, and intelligence are unified in a single ecosystem, innovation becomes unstoppable.”
That is the standard BaRupOn is setting in Liberty, Texas — and the model it intends to carry forward.
Building a stronger nation, one sector at a time.