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Space shuttle Enterprise's new home taking shape at New York City's Intrepid



Space shuttle Enterprise, as seen from the air, is surrounded by the framework for its new display pavilion at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum. (Courtesy Tom Kaminski / WCBS Chopper 880)
April 29, 2013

— Space shuttle Enterprise, NASA's test orbiter that first arrived in New York City one year ago this month, is soon to have a new home.

As aerial photographs taken on Friday (April 26) show, the construction of a new exhibition pavilion is taking shape above and around and prototype space shuttle on board the flight deck of the Intrepid, Sea, Air & Space Museum, a converted World War II aircraft carrier that is docked on the west side of Manhattan.

"The one-year anniversary of Enterprise's arrival in New York City was an exciting milestone for the museum and everyone whose imagination is captured by manned space flight," a spokesperson for the Intrepid said in a statement provided to collectSPACE. "We are currently completing the framework of the new Space Shuttle Pavilion that will serve as the home to the Enterprise exhibit."

"We will soon be installing the outer skin of the structure, then completing the interior, in time for the opening this summer," the spokesperson said.


The Intrepid's new Space Shuttle Pavilion is taking shape around orbiter Enterprise. (Courtesy Tom Kaminski / WCBS Chopper 880)

Enterprise, which did not fly in space but was used for piloted approach and landing tests in 1977, touched down on April 27, 2012, at John F. Kennedy (JFK) International Airport mounted atop a NASA jumbo jet. The orbiter was then transported by barge to the Intrepid just over a month later and opened on public display in July.

A short three months later, Hurricane Sandy tore through New York City, completely destroying the Intrepid's Space Shuttle Pavilion, an air-supported structure that sheltered Enterprise. The superstorm also caused minor damage to the shuttle's vertical stabilizer, or tail.

Repairs to the orbiter were finished last month, when the temporary covered scaffolding surrounding Enterprise was taken down.

As WCBS 880's traffic reporter Tom Kaminski captured in his aerial photographs, the new pavilion relies on a metal skeleton, rather than air pressure, to maintain its shape. When the storm hit last October, the previous pressurized structure deflated as a result of its primary power source and backup generators being flooded.


Space shuttle Enterprise, under the framework of its new display pavilion, is seen next to a British Airways Concorde exhibited on the pier beside the Intrepid. (Tom Kaminski / WCBS Chopper 880)

According to the Intrepid, the same Weeks Marine barge-mounted crane that was used to hoist Enterprise onto the flight deck last year is now being used to construct the new pavilion, which is about the same size as the original display structure.

Since receiving space shuttle Enterprise from NASA and the Smithsonian — the latter had the orbiter on display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, the Virginia annex to the National Air and Space Museum, until space shuttle Discovery took its place in April 2012 — the Intrepid has applied for and received National Historic Place status for the test orbiter.

The museum also launched a dedicated artifacts exhibit, "Space Shuttle Enterprise: A Pioneer," to educate visitors about the history of the prototype spacecraft while its new pavilion is still under construction. The exhibition includes a crowd-sourced photo display of Enterprise's journey to New York City and the Intrepid, which documents in part the rise, fall and rise again of the space shuttle's home on board the aircraft carrier.


Enterprise's new exhibit pavilion is seen under construction from a pier next to the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum. (Intrepid)

See shuttles.collectspace.com for continuing coverage of the delivery and display of NASA's retired space shuttles.


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