Columbia Memorial Space Center
Established | 2009 |
---|---|
Location | Downey, California |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Type | Science Museum |
Key holdings | Space Shuttle Inspiration |
Visitors | 30,000 (in 2013)[1] |
Website | Official website |
The Columbia Memorial Space Center (CMSC) is a science museum owned and operated by the City of Downey, California. Located on 12400 Columbia Way in Downey, it is open to the general public as hands-on space museum and activity center in the Los Angeles area.[2]
Mission
The center's mission is to "ignite people's passion in science, technology, engineering, and space while honoring Downey's aerospace history."[2]
History
The site of the museum is the former Boeing/Rockwell/North American plant where all of the Apollo Command/Service Modules were built and the Space Shuttle was conceived. In 1999, when the Downey Plant closed, the City of Downey began a redevelopment effort, including an educational component. In early 2007, a builder — Tower General Contractors — was selected, and ground was broken on April 12, 2007, on the 18,000 square foot project.[3]
First opened in 2008, CMSC is recognized as the National Memorial to the Space Shuttle Columbia and its crew that was lost on STS-107.[4][5]
On November 7, 2008, a propane tank exploded during the filming of an episode of the television series, Bones. An electrical fire occurred, but resulted in no damage to the museum.[6]
Exhibits
Designated a Challenger Learning Center,[7] the museum has a variety of camps, workshops, and other monthly events to generate interest in STEM in addition to hands on exhibits. Now 20,000 square feet, the two-story building features a robotics lab, HD computer lab, and a wide range of interactive exhibits that provide engaging insights into Space Shuttle operations, living and working on the International Space Station, exploration of our solar system, aerospace engineering, and the range of fields of study and jobs related to human and robotic space exploration.[2]
In 2012, a dummy "boilerplate" Apollo command capsule, BP-19A, was restored by the Kansas Cosmosphere and put on display at the center.[8] It joined BP-12, the first Apollo capsule to fly[9] and now owned by the City of Downey, on display.[10]
Also in 2012, the first "Space Shuttle" – a wood and plastic full-scale mockup built by North American Rockwell in 1972 – was placed on temporary display at the center.[11] Dubbed the "Space Shuttle Inspiration", it was disassembled and returned to storage in early 2014.[12]
References
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External links
- Official website not in Wikidata
- 2008 establishments in California
- Museums in Los Angeles, California
- Aerospace museums in California
- Science museums in California
- Science centers
- History museums in California
- Space Shuttle tourist attractions
- Institutions accredited by the American Alliance of Museums
- Expressionist architecture
- Postmodern architecture in California
- Smithsonian Institution affiliates
- Association of Science-Technology Centers member institutions
- California culture