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The applications of adaptive optics extend across multiple sectors, encompassing areas such as LiDAR, biological and chemical sensing, and free-space optical communications. The advent of metasurfaces optics with reconfigurability has offered a versatile platform for the design of compact optical components, offering a compelling alternative to their conventional bulky counterparts. In this study, we introduce the PROWESS (Phase change Reconfigurable Optical WavEfront Synthesis System project at NASA LaRC), electrically reconfigurable metasurfaces using low-loss, high-contrast phase change material (PCM), Ge2Sb2Se4Te integrated with IR-transparent silicon microheater for various practical applications. The talk covers a reliable platform for switching large-scale PCM-based devices utilizing a microheater and an architecture for the metasurface switching within an integrated circuit configuration, which is compatible with standard foundry fabrication processes. The utilization of near- to midinfrared transparent silicon microheater in the proposed architecture opens possibilities for the development of reconfigurable transmissive optics such as filters, zoom lenses, and beam steering modules. We demonstrated switching of 140 µm × 140 µm PCM pixel, on a 200 µm × 200 µm silicon microheater for several thousand cycles. Further, we performed an in-depth investigation into the failure mechanism utilizing techniques such as transmission electron microscopy and thermal modeling. Guidelines for device performance improvement are proposed, and an improved design with larger endurance is shown in progress. With further progress, we aim to unlock the full potential of PCM-based devices and advance the field of adaptive optics with demonstrable examples including a reconfigurable beam steerer for ocean surface flash LiDAR and Navigation Doppler LiDAR for precise lunar landing missions.