NASA has committed to open-source science that enables Earth observation data transparency, inclusivity, accessibility, and reproducibility – all fundamental to the pace and quality of scientific progress. We have embraced this vision by producing standard InSAR science products that are freely available to the public through NASA Data Active Archive Centers (DAACs) and are generated using state-of-the-art open-source and openly-developed methods. The Advanced Rapid Image Analysis (ARIA) project’s Sentinel-1 Geocoded Unwrapped Phase product (ARIA-S1-GUNW) is a 90 meter InSAR product that spans major, land-based fault systems, the US Coasts, and active volcanic regions through the complete Sentinel-1 record. The products enable the measurement of centimeter-scale surface displacement with applications across the solid earth, hydrology, and sea-level disciplines. The ARIA-S1-GUNW also enables rapid response mapping of surface motion after earthquakes, landslides, and subsidence. The ARIA-S1-GUNW products are freely available through the Alaska Satellite Facility (ASF) DAAC. In the last year, we have successfully grown the archive to over 1.1 million products, a 6 fold increase, through NASA ACCESS by improving our processing workflow and leveraging HyP3, an AWS-based cloud processing environment. We are continuing to partner with researchers to generate more products over relevant areas of scientific interest. All the processing software and cloud infrastructure are open-source to ensure reproducibility and enable other scientists to modify, improve upon, and scale their own cloud workflows for related InSAR analyses. We have, in parallel, developed and supported open-source, well-documented tools to further streamline time-series analysis from the ARIA-S1-GUNW into deformation analysis workflows.