Starting Saturday, visitors can get an up-close and personal view of space
shuttle Atlantis at Kennedy Space
Center Visitor Complex.The newest attraction at KSC, joining its already
popular Shuttle Launch Experience and Angry Birds Space Encounter, opens with
great fanfare. VIP events are taking place Friday and early Saturday. Nearly 50
astronauts on the guest list with at least one from each of Atlantis' 33
missions. Apollo astronauts also are expected to attend."Atlantis is on
display as she would be normally in flight. It's the first time ever that a lot
of people are going to see her this close," said Tim Macy, director of
project development and construction for Delaware North Companies Parks and
Resorts."Here we are dealing with a national treasure," Macy said.
With a price tag of $1.66 billion, "it's a priceless artifact."Through
logistical and engineering feats, the shuttle was tilted at a 43-degree angle
with its payload doors open. Visitors can walk under, around or "nose
level" to the massive craft. During the planning phase, thousands of
pictures were taken. Those images later helped organizers choose the blueprint
for how Atlantis would be displayed.The result displays the view an astronaut
would get as he or she looked out the International Space Station window as
Atlantis was pulling away.
Howitbegan
Although KSC wasn't officially announced as Atlantis' permanent home until April 2011, the idea for the Atlantis exhibit came about five years ago, with development starting a couple years later and construction going on for the past 17 months. Delaware North worked with engineers from NASA, a design team and technical adviser.The $100 million project was funded through money borrowed from Space Florida, money generated from KSC Visitor Complex admission fees and money made from food and merchandise, Macy said. No government funds or tax dollars were used.Atlantis was wrapped in plastic before her big move from the Vehicle Assembly Building to the state-of-the-art exhibit facility last fall. That 90,000-square-foot building boasts an impressive theater, giant LED screens and 1,700 light fixtures. Quotes from people who played a role in the Atlantis program line the walls along with breathtaking photography of the shuttle and its glory."This building was huge, then on Nov. 2, the building got very small very quick," said Macy. "The bird itself, everyone thinks it's slick and going to be pretty. But we're showing you what it looked like when it landed after STS-135. It went straight from the landing strip, over to the orbiter processing facility, and then in November, we rolled it over here and lifted it up 30 feet and tipped it at 43 degrees."NASA offered to clean it up and make it pristine, Macy said, but the team wanted the space dust to remain.The exhibit originally was set to open May 2014, but opening date was accelerated to December 2013, then mid-July.
Whattoexpect
Along with Atlantis, the exhibit features more than 60 interactive displays, continuous films in a theater and in the display area. An impressive mockup of the Hubble Space Telescope hangs near the gift shop. Videos show the history of Hubble and the role Atlantis played in fixing the telescope.Just past Hubble is an exit from the Shuttle Launch Experience.A 1983 airstream used by astronauts for various events is on display, as well as an astrovan, the vehicle used to ferry astronauts to and from launches and landings. The gift shop features space-themed artwork by children and an area where guests can dress up like astronauts for photo opps.The play zone features a giant slide and "astronaut training" exercises.Pop culture phenomenon Stephen Colbert of "The Colbert Report" on Comedy Central makes a special appearance in the exhibit — via a NASA treadmill. In 2009 during a NASA contest, the political pundit lobbied to name one of the rooms at the ISS after him. "Colbert" beat out NASA suggestions Serenity, Legacy, Earthrise and Venture. As a compromise, NASA introduced the Combined Operational Load Bearing External Resistance Treadmill. The treadmill is used for exercising in space. You can see Colbert's "mission patch" at KSC.
Atlantis' 'next mission'
Howitbegan
Although KSC wasn't officially announced as Atlantis' permanent home until April 2011, the idea for the Atlantis exhibit came about five years ago, with development starting a couple years later and construction going on for the past 17 months. Delaware North worked with engineers from NASA, a design team and technical adviser.The $100 million project was funded through money borrowed from Space Florida, money generated from KSC Visitor Complex admission fees and money made from food and merchandise, Macy said. No government funds or tax dollars were used.Atlantis was wrapped in plastic before her big move from the Vehicle Assembly Building to the state-of-the-art exhibit facility last fall. That 90,000-square-foot building boasts an impressive theater, giant LED screens and 1,700 light fixtures. Quotes from people who played a role in the Atlantis program line the walls along with breathtaking photography of the shuttle and its glory."This building was huge, then on Nov. 2, the building got very small very quick," said Macy. "The bird itself, everyone thinks it's slick and going to be pretty. But we're showing you what it looked like when it landed after STS-135. It went straight from the landing strip, over to the orbiter processing facility, and then in November, we rolled it over here and lifted it up 30 feet and tipped it at 43 degrees."NASA offered to clean it up and make it pristine, Macy said, but the team wanted the space dust to remain.The exhibit originally was set to open May 2014, but opening date was accelerated to December 2013, then mid-July.
Whattoexpect
Along with Atlantis, the exhibit features more than 60 interactive displays, continuous films in a theater and in the display area. An impressive mockup of the Hubble Space Telescope hangs near the gift shop. Videos show the history of Hubble and the role Atlantis played in fixing the telescope.Just past Hubble is an exit from the Shuttle Launch Experience.A 1983 airstream used by astronauts for various events is on display, as well as an astrovan, the vehicle used to ferry astronauts to and from launches and landings. The gift shop features space-themed artwork by children and an area where guests can dress up like astronauts for photo opps.The play zone features a giant slide and "astronaut training" exercises.Pop culture phenomenon Stephen Colbert of "The Colbert Report" on Comedy Central makes a special appearance in the exhibit — via a NASA treadmill. In 2009 during a NASA contest, the political pundit lobbied to name one of the rooms at the ISS after him. "Colbert" beat out NASA suggestions Serenity, Legacy, Earthrise and Venture. As a compromise, NASA introduced the Combined Operational Load Bearing External Resistance Treadmill. The treadmill is used for exercising in space. You can see Colbert's "mission patch" at KSC.
Atlantis' 'next mission'
"We say this is her next
mission," Macy said. "Her mission is to tell the story."We don't
know really what's next in terms of manned space flight," he said.
"Nobody's absolutely sure, but what we do know is that this shuttle and
this shuttle program got us to where we are today."Saturday's opening
offers KSC visitors a unique experience and a chance to learn about a real
mechanical superhero."Transformers are cool, but this is real," Macy
said. "This is the real Transformer. This thing opens up and transforms
itself from a rocket into a glider. That's a pretty cool transformation, I
think."We have an opportunity to teach people, and that's kind of an added
bonus."The new exhibit that offers an up close look at space shuttle
Atlantis officially opened at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex on
Saturday.The $100 million attraction features space shuttle Atlantis suspended
30 feet in the air and rotated at an angle as if it were orbiting Earth.
Additionally, the exhibit has multimedia presentations and high-tech simulators
that will educate visitors about the space shuttle program.Dozens of high
ranking NASA and Kennedy Space Center officials, as well as astronauts who flew
on Atlantis, were in attendance for the attraction's grand opening event
Saturday morning."I had a little tear form in the corner of my eye. I
think it's a testament to this community and KSC trying to help get this Space
Coast back, looking at the beauty and benefits of the past," astronaut
Leland Melvin said.Officials broke ground on the 90,000 square foot exhibit
back in January of 2012. The attraction is the largest enhancement to the
Visitor's Complex ever.Moving the shuttle from the vehicle assembly building to
the visitor complex wasn't easy. Crews had to take down 120 street lights, 23
traffic lights and 56 street signs for the shuttle's 10-mile journey.The Space
Shuttle Atlantis exhibit is included in a general admission ticket to the
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex.
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