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Space Shuttle Enterprise Lands at New York City's Intrepid Museum

NEW YORK — For the first time in history, a space shuttle is landing aboard an aircraft carrier, but instead of catching an arresting wire at high speed, the winged orbiter will be slowly lowered onto the flight deck by crane.
/ Source: Space.com

NEW YORK — For the first time in history, a space shuttle is landing aboard an aircraft carrier, but instead of catching an arresting wire at high speed, the winged orbiter will be slowly lowered onto the flight deck by crane.

Space shuttle Enterprise, NASA's 1970's prototype for its now-retired spacecraft fleet, arrived at the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in New York City around 12:55 p.m. EDT (1655 GMT) on Wednesday (June 6) after a morning sea trek by barge from a port in Jersey City, NJ. The Intrepid, which is docked on Manhattan's west side, is a retired World War II aircraft carrier that is now used to house aerospace and maritime exhibits.

The craning operation to deliver the 150,000-pound (68,000-kilogram) Enterprise aboard the museum's steel-enforced flight deck was expected to take about three hours to complete.

Enterprise's arrival was the latest, and at least for a while, final chapter in its journey to be displayed at the Manhattan museum, which included a flight on top of a NASA jumbo jet and a three-day trip by barge between the Big Apple and Garden State. Later this week, the Intrepid will begin raising a climate-controlled, steel and fabric shelter over the shuttle, to protect it while it is on display.

The Intrepid's new "Space Shuttle Pavilion" is set to open to the public on July 19. Thousands however, got a "sneak peak" on Wednesday as they watched the shuttle move up the Hudson River. [ Photos: Space Shuttle Enterprise Arrives in NYC ]

Space shuttle's sea trek

Enterprise's river ride on Wednesday began at 9:45 a.m. EDT (1345 GMT) from Weeks Marine in Jersey City.

The shuttle was in New Jersey to switch barges. The shuttle was transferred from the barge that brought it from John F. Kennedy International Airport on Sunday (June 3) to a different barge for the final trip to the Intrepid.

During its move from the airport, Enterprise sustained minor damage to its right wingtip when it scraped up against a bridge's barrier. The shallow gouge left in the wake of some of its foam mock heat shield tiles was partially camouflaged for its arrival at the Intrepid by a black-colored coating.

The cosmetic damage was hardly noticeable as Enterprise floated by the Statue of Liberty and the World Trade Center on its way to its new museum home.

The Intrepid had originally planned for the shuttle's sea trek to occur on Tuesday but poor weather conditions delayed loading the Enterprise onto its barge. Wednesday's weather cooperated, making for smooth sailing to Pier 86 at West 46th Avenue and 12th Street in Manhattan.

Up and a sway

Soon after arriving alongside the Intrepid, Enterprise was being prepared to be craned onto the museum's flight deck. To enable the lift, the space shuttle will be outfitted with the yellow metal sling that was used to hoist it on and off NASA's modified Boeing 747 shuttle carrier aircraft that delivered Enterprise to New York.

The orbiter is to be positioned on the deck so that its nose is pointed toward the Hudson River. Its 78-foot (24-meter) wingspan will stretch almost the entire width of the flight deck.

It will be the first time a space shuttle has been displayed atop an aircraft carrier, though the exhibit is only temporary. The Intrepid is planning to build a permanent display home for the Enterprise to showcase the shuttle and enhance its other space-related exhibits and educational curriculum.

Enterprise's earlier exhibitions

Enterprise was previously displayed at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida prior to it being donated to the Smithsonian Institution in 1985. Before arriving at the Intrepid, Enterprise was exhibited at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in northern Virginia for eight years. It was moved to New York City after shuttle Discovery inherited its place in the National Collection.

Although Enterprise did not fly in space — it was instead used for a series of approach and landing tests in the late 1970s — it holds the record among NASA's shuttle fleet for traveling the farthest around the globe without ever leaving Earth's atmosphere.

Enterprise was the only NASA shuttle to visit several countries in Europe while overseas for the 1983 Paris Air Show (it made its first flyover of New York while on its return to the U.S.). A year later it embarked on its first barge journey, being delivered to New Orleans for the 1984 World's Fair.

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

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