HOUSTON — NASA's historic Mission Control is soon to be made even more historic.
The , which first went active 50 years ago Wednesday (June 3), has been dormant since 1992. A National Historic Landmark, today it is a public tour stop and features the authentic consoles used for the Apollo 11 moon landing and Apollo 13 in-flight emergency, among 40 other space missions.
"It is a place that feels like a cathedral to us," said Apollo-era flight director Glynn Lunney on Wednesday at a press event held in the control room . "I think we would like to see it permanently [preserved]."
"I think it is important for people to come to see it. I hope they are going to be seeing it a hundred years from now," he added. []
Similar flight control rooms inside the same building, the Mission Control Center at NASA's Johnson Space Center, have been — and continue to be upgraded—to support the crews aboard the Space Station, future commercial crewed spacecraft and the space agency's own planned Orion missions into deep space.
The "Historic Mission Control Room," as its name implies, has generally been left in , although there is room for improvement.
"NASA has involved some of us old guys to participate in the restoration of this thing," Gerry Griffin, an Apollo flight director and former director of the , said. "The idea is to perhaps put it back exactly like it was the last day we walked out of here in 1972 at the end of Apollo. That's kind of the vision."
"The ashtrays have got to be there," Griffin told reporters, adding the coffee cups, too.
"We can feel the ambiance in this room, because whether on the moon or on , this is where it all started, this is the foundation," Knight reflected. "Everything that's being built on today began on the shoulders of the giants who worked in this room. And that is important."
"When you come into this room, you'll be able to learn and understand what these giants did in that timeframe—and then see where NASA is going in ," he said.
The project, which involves the National Park , is on track, said Knight.
"This room , it represents Apollo, and it represents shuttle—we did fly shuttle flights from here," said shuttle-era flight director Steve Stich, who worked his first mission out of the same room when it was active. "I love it the way it is. can make it a little bit better, it would be great."
to see more photos of NASA's historic Mission Control room in Houston.
SPACE.com
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