The objective of this Phase 2 is the fabrication, assembly, integration, and testing of an end-to-end airborne hyperspectral system optimized for imaging and mapping of the coastal environment. The system design, as developed in the Phase 1 report, integrates an autonomous data acquisition system with a spectral processing system on a PC based workstation for the rapid detection, discrimination, and quantification of components affecting water quality, and bottom type. The designed system is based on currently available technology and on new components and software features, which are optimized to address the requirements of the coastal environment. The design of the autonomous hyperspectral imaging system incorporates several technical improvements dealing with real-time image display, geo-registration, sensor signal-to-noise performance, radiometric calibration, and software enhancements. The proposed imaging system improvements are specifically tailored to meet the coastal mapping requirements but they also provide an enhanced capability for general-purpose imaging. The system design provides the specification for system component identification and optimization. COMMERCIAL APPLICATIONS: Hyperspectral imaging systems have a number of commercial applications both in the microscopic and in the macroscopic scale. Major proven applications of airborne imaging include mineral exploration, environmental pollution monitoring, precision farming, vegetation stress monitoring, infrastructure, and urban area planning.