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A space shuttle model is cleared for landing in Downey

A black and white space shuttle model sits inside a large building. People surround the shuttle model.
A computer rendering of the Inspiration' space shuttle mockup in its new Downey home
(
Courtesy Columbia Memorial Space Center
)

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A full-size space shuttle model is cleared for landing in Downey
The Columbia Memorial Space Center in Downey held a groundbreaking ceremony Monday for a roughly 40,000 square foot expansion that will include indoor and outdoor science learning areas and space for special exhibits. LAist's Robert Garrova reports.

The Columbia Memorial Space Center in Downey held a groundbreaking ceremony Monday for a roughly 40,000-square-foot expansion that will include indoor and outdoor science learning areas and space for special exhibits.

The centerpiece of the buildout will include an interactive display of the Inspiration space shuttle mockup, where visitors can go inside the cargo bay.

Built in 1972, the 35-foot-tall model made of wood, plastic and aluminum functioned as a prototype and fitting tool for all of the orbiters that launched into space.

“We’re super excited to be able to put it on display for the public, really for the first time in forever,” Ben Dickow, president and executive director of the Columbia Memorial Space Center, told LAist.

The expansion will also allow for educational areas, where students can learn about the pioneering engineering and design work that went into building the model at Rockwell International in Downey.

The backstory

Last fall, after sitting in storage for more than a decade, the full-scale model was moved a few blocks to a temporary home.

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The front section of a black and white space shuttle model is seen loaded onto a large truck for transportation
The Inspiration space shuttle mockup was moved in sections to a temporary home last fall
(
Courtesy Columbia Memorial Space Center
)

The Space Center said renovation work on the mock up will take months and include rehabs of its 60-foot cargo bay and flight deck.

Dickow said Downey is where all of the Apollo capsules that went to the moon and all of the space shuttles were designed and built.

“This is part of the L.A. story as much as entertainment or anything like that,” Dickow said, adding that it’s a legacy he feels like Angelenos sometimes forget. “The space craft that took humanity to the moon, the space craft that brought humanity into lower earth orbit and built the international space station, these are human firsts... and they all happened right here.”

What’s next? 

The Space Center is looking to raise $50 million that would go toward building plans, special exhibits and more.

Dickow said the new building that will house the space shuttle mockup should be open to the public in about two years.

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By early next year, he said the plan is to have the shuttle model available for bi-monthly public visits as it undergoes renovation.

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