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Saturn V Rocket Gets A New Lease On Life
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - It was designed to go to the moon, but a little
coastal humidity is all it took for the towering Saturn V rocket at Johnson
Space Center to begin to rot like an old pickup left in the front yard.
Owls and mice moved in. A green leafy plant sprung out of one of the escape
module’s
red boosters. Some yellowish-orange spongy stuff sprouted from its side. Years
of rainwater had left the rocket’s aluminum underside corroded.
Greg Burch, a Houston lawyer escorting some international clients to the
space center, was so dismayed he started a local money-raising effort last
year to
restore the rocket.
Now, after $3 million in improvements from public grants and private donations,
the progress so far is “almost miraculous,” Burch said. If another
$1 million can be raised, the job should be done by year’s end.
From 1968-1972, Saturn rickets propelled 24 astronauts around the moon, a
dozen of them walking on its surface.
Considered an engineering masterpiece at the time, Saturn V is taller than
the Statue of Liberty. It had a takeoff weight exceeding that of 25 fully loaded
airliners and produced as much power as 85 Hoover Dams, according to the NASA
history office.
The Saturn V on display at Johnson Space Center never made it to space, however.
It was to be used in the Apollo 18 mission, but the mission was canceled as
the moon program waned.
For the past 28 years, the rocket has greeted visitors at the entrance to
the space center; two other Saturn rockets are on display at Kennedy Space
Center
in Cape Canaveral, FL, and Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, AL.
The Houston rocket is currently surrounded by a temporary structure and will
soon be air conditioned to protect it from the sticky summer heat.
“It will last indefinitely as long as it is kept out of Houston’s
ozone and humidity,” said Allan Needell, curator of the Apollo Collection
at the National Air and Space Museum. Needell says workers have removed about
half of the bacteria, mold and mildew that was slowly destroying the rocket.
Once restoration is complete, the Smithsonian Institute, which owns the rocket,
believes nearly a million visitors will visit it each year.
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