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James S. McDonnell Space Hangar Open at Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Visitors to the National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center can now explore the remarkable holdings in its newly filled
space hangar.
Although the Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Va. opened to much acclaim in December 2003, the 53,000-square-foot James S. McDonnell
Space Hangar was inaccessible because of the needed refurbishment of its centerpiece, space shuttle Enterprise. With that project
now completed, hundreds of other artifacts have been installed in the exhibition hall, from a 69-foot floor-to-ceiling Redstone missile
to tiny "Anita," a spider carried on Skylab for web formation experiments.
The hangar and its holdings illustrate the scope of
space exploration history as organized around four main themes: rocketry and missiles; human spaceflight; application satellites and
space science.
"The Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum has always been known as the home of the icons of flight. The James S. McDonnell
Space Hangar at the Udvar-Hazy Center gives us the chance to share much more of our vast collection as we present the story of space
exploration in richer detail."
- Museum Director Gen. J.R. "Jack" Dailey
A total of 113
large space artifacts are housed in the hangar. The biggest and heaviest, including Enterprise, an instrument ring segment of a Saturn
V rocket that was never built and a Space Shuttle main engine are displayed at ground level. An array of cruise missiles, satellites
and space telescopes hangs from above.
The hangar features two elevated overlooks that allow visitors to study suspended
artifacts straight-on and ground-level displays from above.
More than 500 smaller artifacts are exhibited in customized cases
throughout the hangar including advanced spacesuit prototypes; research crystals formed in orbit; sounding rocket payloads; space-themed
toys from the 1950s and 1960s and even borscht in tubes, prepared for Soviet cosmonauts.
The oldest artifact
in the hangar, the Ritchey Grinding Machine, dates back to the 1890s, when it was used to craft a 60-inch mirror for a Wisconsin observatory
telescope. The newest artifact is an engineering model created by U.S. Naval Academy midshipmen as they developed, for a class project, the
PCSat communications satellite launched in 2001 and still in orbit.
Many of the objects now in the space hangar had been in storage
for decades. A portion was previewed over the past months in the Udvar-Hazy Center's aviation hangar.
The museum's unparalleled space
collection is built on an agreement that gives the Smithsonian first option to acquire any equipment used and then retired by NASA. The
collection includes every retired American spacecraft that flew humans and returned safely to Earth; every spacesuit used to walk on the
moon and backups or engineering models of nearly every major American satellite or probe.
Space artifacts from other nations have
been donated by individuals and governments or are displayed on loan.
Other unique artifacts now exhibited in the McDonnell Space
Hangar include:
- the manned maneuvering unit used for the first-ever untethered spacewalk
- a film return capsule from the last Corona satellite spy mission over the U.S.S.R.
- the flotation collar and bags used for the Apollo 11 splashdown
- a Gemini paraglider research vehicle used to train for potential ground landings
- Pegasus, the first aircraft-launched rocket booster to carry satellites into space
- a form-fitting centrifuge seat made exclusively for Mercury astronaut John Glenn
- a full-scale engineering prototype of the Mars Pathfinder Lander
- a human-sized, NASA-built android used for 1960s spacesuit testing
- the Spartan 201 satellite, deployed for solar research during five shuttle missions
The McDonnell Space Hangar is named for aerospace pioneer James S. McDonnell, whose company built a number of pioneering aircraft
and both the Mercury and Gemini spacecraft, flown by the first American astronauts.
The museum plans to install additional artifacts in the hanger over the next few years.
See a live view inside the James S. McDonnell Space Hangar:
James S. McDonnell Space Hangar - Live Web Camera
YouCanHelpNASM@si.edu
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