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Space shuttle Atlantis under wraps as exhibit's boosters begin to rise



March 6, 2013 — With just about four months remaining before its public debut, the "Space Shuttle Atlantis" exhibit at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida is taking shape — both inside and out.



The $100 million exhibit, which is scheduled to open June 29, will bring the public nose-to-nose — and nose-to-wing and nose-to-tail — with NASA's space shuttle Atlantis, the last orbiter to fly in space before the fleet was retired in 2011. Since entering the six-story building in November 2012, Atlantis has been raised off the ground, shrink-wrapped in 16,000 square feet of plastic and tilted 43 degrees, the latter designed to give guests a view of what the shuttle looked like to astronauts aboard the International Space Station.



With Atlantis shielded from dirt and dust, work is underway to finish walkways and theaters that will lead visitors through the history of the space shuttle program as they tour around Atlantis and more than 60 related exhibits. Come May, when the shuttle is unwrapped, its payload bay doors will be carefully opened, a replica of its Canadarm robotic arm will be extended and a full-scale model of the Hubble Space Telescope will be installed to span two floors.



Meanwhile outside the facility, the finishing touches are being put on the building's glimmering orange facade that was designed to evoke the space shuttle's re-entry into the atmosphere. Nearby, the steel skeleton of what will be two, towering 185- foot- high replica solid rocket boosters have begun to rise off the ground. Visitors will walk between the two rockets — and underneath a massive external fuel tank suspended from them — to enter the exhibit.



collectSPACE recently had the chance to tour the construction site, where even in its still- under- wraps condition, the space shuttle Atlantis is an impressive sight, as the following photos capture.



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



Photos: collectSPACE.com / Robert Z. Pearlman





















































Below: The steel skeleton for the "Space Shuttle Atlantis" exhibit's entranceway solid rocket boosters begins to rise off the ground.



















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