California Science Center has another milestone for shuttle display

Science center
Workers gather as the second of two aft skirts from the Space Shuttle Endeavour is lifted during the first installation of ‘Go for Stack’ at the California Science Center on July 20, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo credit Mario Tama/Getty Images

An ambitious effort to display the retired space shuttle Endeavour in an upright, launch-ready configuration at the California Science Center had another milestone Wednesday.

It took crews around two hours to move a massive external fuel tank roughly 1,000 feet through Exposition Park so it can be lifted into vertical position.

Moving the tank, known as ET-94, was a delicate operation. ET-94 is 154 feet long, 27.5 feet in diameter and weighs about 65,000 pounds, according to the Science Center. It is also the last remaining flight-qualified external tank in existence.

Crews employed a "self-propelled modular transporter" for the tank's 1,000-foot, two-hour journey past the Science Center building and the Exposition Park Rose Garden to the site of the under-construction Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center, which will house the one-of-a-kind shuttle display.

Once the tank is in place, beginning late Thursday night or early Friday morning, a heavy-duty crane will be used to gently lift it into vertical position and place it alongside two already-standing solid rocket boosters. Vertical assembly of the twin 149-foot tall rocket boosters was completed in early December. That assembly includes the aft skirts or base of the boosters, along with the 116-foot-long rocket motors and the "forward assembly," or cone-shaped tops.

KNX News' Pete Demetriou spoke to Science Center President Jeff Rudolph about the process.

"The question is, when can we do it? If the wind picks up, we can't have it airborne with wind conditions that we were expecting," he said.

If the winds don't pick up, lifting and mounting the external tank could be about a six-hour operation Thursday night and Friday morning. After that, engineers are ready to schedule the arrival and vertical mounting of the Eendeavour orbiter, which will be roughly at the end of the month.

The addition of ET-94 to the vertical display will leave the star attraction -- the shuttle Endeavour itself -- as the only component left to move.

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The Endeavour had been on display horizontally at the Science Center for more than a decade. Public access to the shuttle, however, ended on Dec. 31 so preparations could begin for its eventual move to the new exhibit, which will be the only launch-ready display of a former NASA space shuttle in the world.

Science Center officials have dubbed the months-long effort to create the vertical shuttle display as the "Go For Stack" process.

The shuttle launch display will be the centerpiece of the 200,000- square-foot Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center, which will nearly double the Science Center's educational exhibition space. The building will include three multi-level galleries, themed for air, space and shuttle. The new facility will also house an events and exhibit center that will house large-scale rotating exhibitions.

An opening date for the new $400 million center has not yet been determined.

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Featured Image Photo Credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images