Definition
A federal research and analysis center within the U.S. Department of Transportation that provides technical expertise on transportation systems, including aviation. In the instrument procedures context, the Volpe Center is the organization responsible for evaluating and identifying obstacles that may affect instrument approach procedures, and it produces obstacle data used by the FAA in the design and charting of those procedures.
Plain English
A government center that studies transportation problems for the U.S. Department of Transportation. For pilots, it is the group that finds and lists the towers, buildings, and terrain that the FAA needs to know about when designing instrument approaches.
Context Anchor
Seen in FAA handbook material that explains the background, development, or support of instrument approach charts and related aviation systems.
Derivation
Named after John A. Volpe, a former U.S. Secretary of Transportation. The center was established in 1970 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Knowing the name comes from a person, not a technical concept, helps explain why the title sounds formal rather than descriptive.
Why Pilots Care
The obstacle information that shapes minimum altitudes, approach paths, and missed approach designs on the charts pilots fly comes in part from work done by this center. It is one of the behind-the-scenes sources that makes published procedures safe to fly.
Intuition Check
Do not read “Center” here as an air traffic control facility or a point on an approach chart. Here it means a government research and technical support organization.
Example Sentence 1
The obstacle survey data used to design the new RNAV approach was provided by the Volpe National Transportation Systems Center.
Example Sentence 2
Pilots benefit indirectly when the Volpe National Transportation Systems Center evaluates new instrument approach concepts for safety.