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NASA Space United States

NASA's Abandoned Launch Facilities 56

trazom28 writes I ran across an interesting slideshow of NASA's abandoned launch facilities. It's an interesting piece of scientific history. The images are from "photographer Roland Miller's upcoming book, Abandoned in Place. The book is a visual study of the deactivated launch and research facilities that played an essential role in early American space exploration.
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NASA's Abandoned Launch Facilities

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  • Then and Now (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 23, 2015 @01:57PM (#49322525)

    I highly recommend the Then and Now tour at Cape Canaveral AFS. You sign up for it at the KSC visitors' center.

    • Re:Then and Now (Score:5, Informative)

      by Imagix ( 695350 ) on Monday March 23, 2015 @02:40PM (#49322781)
      Note that one of the tours requires you to bring a passport (if you're not a USAian), I believe the justification was that you're going onto an active military base.
      • That's not surprising. They want something guaranteed to be good. It's unrealistic for them to be able to know if every form of ID from any country in the world is legitimate. I'm sure they do at least a cursory check before allowing anyone in.

        In theory, your passport is good. It should have been checked when you entered the US.

        If you are a foreign national in the US, you're suppose to keep your passport with you at all times. Some states require anyone 18 and over to carry at least a state issued I

        • by Imagix ( 695350 )
          Oh, I wasn't complaining :) Reasonable request. But we ran into this when we just went there. We don't carry the passport around as a matter of principle (theft risk). But, had we known ahead of time, we would have been carrying it. Oh well.
  • It's too bad they can't find a use for these facilities. Contractors would rather build new stuff that may or may not ever be used.
  • What the heck is number 4? Looking at the door it appears to be in a thick concrete dome. With very uncomfortable looking inclined metal seats. (with harnesses) all angled to a center cage with "Fire Blanket" canisters...
    The title is rather unhelpfully "Abandoned Secret NASA Complex" -roll eyes-

    • Re:Number 4 (Score:5, Informative)

      by SlayerofGods ( 682938 ) on Monday March 23, 2015 @02:07PM (#49322585)

      So follow up...(thank you google image search) Wired also is carrying the pictures and actually tells you what they are instead of BS like "Abandoned Secret NASA Complex"
      http://www.wired.com/2014/11/c... [wired.com]
      Number 4 is
      "Shelter Dome, Rubber Room, Launch Pad 39B, Kennedy Space Center, FL, 1996. “Adjoining the Rubber Room was a Shelter Dome room with the floor set on springs to isolate the occupants from whatever conflagration may be occurring above them as they seek shelter.”

      • Wow ... and on a rocket launch pad, that "conflagration" could be quite, er, dramatic.

        Would not ever want to be the poor bastard who had to lock himself into that room and hope it would hold up.

        That's the "curl up in a corner and keep screaming until they find you" room.

        • Re:Number 4 (Score:4, Informative)

          by SlayerofGods ( 682938 ) on Monday March 23, 2015 @04:11PM (#49323387)

          Yah that's why the photo caught my eye; I was thinking why would people inside a several foot thick concrete dome need harnesses and fire blankets... whomever is in this room is not having a good day.
          After knowing what it's called there is an even more amazing article on that very room.
          http://www.spaceflightnow.com/... [spaceflightnow.com]
          They join technicians working on the platform to jump down a chute on the north-side of the platform that connected to the teflon-lined slide that rapidly gets them underground.
          That 200-foot slide empties into the aptly-named "rubber room" with its rubber floors meant to absorb the impact of the explosion occurring on the pad surface 40 feet above them. Hopping off the landing ramp, the people would scurry to their left into the fallout shelter, a domed room suspended on shock-dampening springs and sealed off with massive blast-proof doors. Inside, the chamber held 20 chairs, a toilet and carbon dioxide scrubbing equipment to keep the occupants alive until rescue teams arrive.

          AWESOME!

      • Thanks, that link is so much better. The editors should change the front page.

      • I wonder what the reasoning was for mounting the blast door that way. I would think you'd want it oriented such that a blast coming down the slide would push the door closed, instead of hold it open. Although I suppose that if the door isn't closed all the way by the time a blast reaches that far it might not matter.

  • Me depressed now (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Monday March 23, 2015 @02:14PM (#49322615)

    It wouldn't be so bad if this were just part of a natural evolution of NASA. But at its heart it's the result of the dramatic slashing of the NASA budget after Apollo, the end of the "space race," and constant political interference (mostly in the form of pork projects that Congressmen wanted NASA to lend credibility to). NASA is a sad shell of its 1960's self, and these facilities are a very literal reminder of that fact.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Ah yes, "political interference". You mean like the only way the Apollo project would have existed in the first place?

      Unless Kennedy was paid by Martin Marietta and Rockwell and Grumman to "commit this nation" to send a few test pilots on the Moon?

    • But at its heart it's the result of the dramatic slashing of the NASA budget after Apollo, the end of the "space race," and constant political interference (mostly in the form of pork projects that Congressmen wanted NASA to lend credibility to).

      Well, no. Not really.

      Pretty much all of the Saturn V pads and buildings are still there, and still in use - having been repurposed multiple times. The Saturn I pads were abandoned in the late 60's because nobody thought we'd ever use them again. (And then along

    • NASA is a sad shell of its 1960's self, and these facilities are a very literal reminder of that fact.

      C'mon, everybody knows by now that the real "'scare" of Sputnik wasn't that the Russkies put a tiny satellite into orbit, but that the R7 that put it there was a capable ICBM [wikipedia.org].

      The whole "man on the Moon" thing was political cover for having the biggest-baddest ICBM rockets on the planet and being able to militarize space. You can tell taxpayers that you're going to spend a huge chunk of GDP on technology to

  • Some really nice photos. Hard to believe their still was an A4 on a stand in 1996; it looks like it was kept up as a display. This also brings up my frustration with Kickstarter. There a lot of cool projects I'd back if only I could find out about them in time; usually I find out about them when I read a 'Kickstarter funded" tag line in an article and the funding period is over.
  • by wcrowe ( 94389 ) on Monday March 23, 2015 @02:31PM (#49322717)

    These remind me of the old Rocketdyne [wikipedia.org] facility near where I grew up in Southwest Missouri. There were a couple of huge rocket testing facilities out there, but they were shut down in the 60s (I think). Thirty years ago, I could take my Jeep and drive around out there and snoop around.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      I worked for a few years at Rocketdyne's SSFL site [wikipedia.org] where engine testing went on until about 15 years ago. I believe almost all the test stands have been knocked down. There's currently a big environmental cleanup going on. Watching Delta IIs being tested was amazing. My cubicle was in a building near where they used to run some component tests. I had a window that was about a foot in diameter and half a foot thick.
  • Many facilities back when they were cranking out rockets like sausages, some explode during liftoff. Also lots of test stand activities such as Santa Susana test facility in hills behind Los Angeles, and today like many other places abandoned and contaminated.
  • Those shouldn't be abandoned for long if space technology goes further back than Apollo.

  • ... To the private space contractors. SOMEONE should get some use out of them. If NASA doesn't want to use those facilities, I'll bet Boeing and SpaceX etc can find a use for them.

    They're always in need of large construction hangers near launch pads.

  • What annoys me about slideshows like this is the complete lack of information provided about the photos. Captions like "Abandoned Space Program Facilities" just aren't very helpful - we already know that. What was it? Was it a lab where they tested different propellants, a workshop where the engineers could fab prototype components for Saturn V? That's all it takes to make the difference between "meh, pretty photos" and "this is really interesting".

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