Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center
The
Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at NASA's Kennedy Space Center
celebrates its 50th anniversary this month. After serving through the
Apollo and Space Shuttle Programs, the mammoth structure now is
undergoing renovations to accommodate future launch vehicles and to
continue as a major part of America's efforts to explore space for
another 50 years.
Construction began with driving the first steel pilings on Aug. 2,
1963. It was part of NASA's massive effort to send astronauts to the
moon for the Apollo Program. Altogether, 4,225 pilings were driven down
164 feet to bedrock with a foundation consisting of 30,000 cubic yards
of concrete. Construction of the VAB required 98,590 tons of steel. When
completed in 1965, the VAB was one of the largest buildings in the
world with 129,428,000 cubic feet of interior volume. The structure
covers eight acres, is 525 feet tall and 518 feet wide. To accommodate
moving, processing and stacking rocket stages, 71 cranes and hoists,
including two 250-ton bridge cranes were installed. On the east and west
sides are four high bay doors, each designed to open 456 feet in height
allowing rollout of the Apollo/Saturn V moon rockets mounted atop
launch umbilical towers.
This photo from November 9, 1970, shows a ground level view at Launch
Complex 39, Kennedy Space Center, with the Apollo 14 (Spacecraft
110/Lunar Module 8/Saturn 509) space vehicle leaving the Vehicle
Assembly Building. The Saturn V stack and its mobile launch tower, atop a
huge crawler-transporter, were rolled out to Pad A.
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Image Credit: NASA
NASA
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmal.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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