Space Shuttle Enterprise ready to go on display, space travel gets its fitting tribute

Space Shuttle Enterprise at sea

The Enterprise has been on what we’d call a very leisurely trip around the East coast, but it’s finally time for the original Space Shuttle to settle down. As of Thursday, the only way to glimpse the prototype spacecraft will be under an inflatable roof at the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in New York City. It’s a quiet yet noble end for the vehicle, which didn’t go on formal missions but set the ground– sorry, spacework for the Shuttles that came later. If you’re interested in seeing more animated forms of the Enterprise’s legacy, you can either sit down to watch its namesake TV franchise or follow the private expeditions that owe it a debt of gratitude.

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Space Shuttle Enterprise ready to go on display, space travel gets its fitting tribute originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Jul 2012 04:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Inside NASA’s Launch Control Center at Kennedy Space Center

Inside NASA's Launch Control Center at Kennedy Space Center

At the dawn of the Space Shuttle program, NASA’s Launch Control Center (LCC) was placed off limits for public tours. On June 15, however, busses embellished with Kennedy Space Center (KSC) decals began whisking visitors off to the control complex for the first time in more than three decades – nearly a year after the final shuttle mission last summer.

After clearing a security checkpoint, our bus wheels its way deep into Kennedy Space Center, NASA’s 240,000-acre property on Merritt Island, Fla., that doubles as a wildlife refuge. The monolithic Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) comes into view and grows larger as we approach. Referred to by NASA employees as the heart of the operation, the VAB houses spacecraft as they’re pieced together. Once complete, a 6-million-pound crawler-transporter sidles up to the structure, gets fitted with the craft and ferries it over a gravel roadway to the launch pad 3.4 miles away. The LCC, which staff dubbed the brains of the system, is adjoined to the VAB by a slim corridor protruding from its boxy, white exterior.

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Inside NASA’s Launch Control Center at Kennedy Space Center originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Jul 2012 13:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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