NASA’s Most Iconic Building is 55 Years Old and Just Getting Started
upstart writes in with an IRC submission:
NASA's most iconic building is 55 years old and just getting started:
NASA's Kennedy Space Center is now nearly six decades old-it was formally created on July 1, 1962 as a separate entity from Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama. Construction began soon after.
At the time, the "Launch Operations Directorate" under Wernher von Braun and his team of German scientists was based at Marshall. But NASA's leaders realized they would need their own facilities in Florida alongside the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. So they created a new "Launch Operations Center" on nearby Merritt Island. President Lyndon B. Johnson would rename the facility Kennedy Space Center a week after President John F. Kennedy's November 1963 assassination in Dallas.
As plans for the Apollo Program developed, NASA also soon realized it would need a large building in which to assemble the Saturn V rocket that would power the Moon landings. Work began on what was then known as the Vertical Assembly Building (VAB), where the big rocket would be stacked in a vertical configuration before rolling out to the launch pad.
The 160-meter-tall building was topped off in 1965 and completed in 1966. Construction photos of the VAB's development-the building required almost 90,000 metric tons of steel-are as incredible as those of the finished building itself. But NASA officials wanted to make clear at the time that this building was not an end in itself. Rather, it was a means to an end.
Read more of this story at SoylentNews.