The Impossible Factory: The Remarkable True Story of Kelly Johnson and the Lockheed Skunk Works, America's Innovation Machine (Unabridged)
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Product Summery
The extraordinary true story of Lockheed Martinâs âSkunk Worksââthe radical innovation hub that designed the greatest airplanes of the twentieth centuryâand the visionary who made it all possible
"A kerosene-soaked masterclass in what extreme innovation looks, feels, and even smells like." âNew York Times bestselling author Ashlee Vance
It began with a humble warehouse building in Burbank, California, and a charismatic young engineer named Kelly Johnson. In 1938, Johnson, who was then freshly out of the University of Michiganâs school of engineering, got the idea for a small, agile, disruptive engineering shopâone that could help Americaâs war machine innovate more quickly. By 1943, with the U.S. now in World War II and desperate for new technology, âAdvanced Development Projectsââlater nicknamed the âSkunk Worksââwas born.
During Johnsonâs forty-seven years at Lockheed Martin, the Skunk Works developed at least half a dozen planes that would have been the capstone achievement of anyone elseâs career. There was the P-38 Lighting, which outdueled Axis pilots over Europe and the Pacific. The XP-80, Americaâs first ever fighter jet, which did indeed help the Allies win World War II. The Constellation, the first passenger plane with a pressurized cabin, revolutionized commercial air travel. The U-2 spy plane, which could reach an astonishing altitude of 70,000 feet, enabling it to fly dangerous covert missions in Soviet airspace during the height of the Cold War. And perhaps most famous of all, the A-12/SR-71 Blackbird, one of the most unusual, and iconic, planes ever designed.
But the planes were only part of Kelly Johnsonâs legacy. There was also his management style, which would come to shape organizations for decades to come. Under him, the Skunk Worksâ structureâflat management, no red tape, extraordinary speedâquickly became the model for nurturing innovation, and eventually would fuel the nimble startups of Silicon Valley. Half a century before Mark Zuckerberg coined the motto âmove fast and break things,â Kelly Johnson was living that mantraâand at the same time helping the Department of Defense secure the fate of the free world.

