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Space shuttle Endeavour exhibits opening in Los Angeles

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“I hope that when people see this hardware they’re able to appreciate the technological complexity and technological difficulty of putting the shuttle into space and keep it going for all these years,” said Mike Carlson, a Rocketdyne engineer who once managed the support center. “It wasn’t easy.”

And then there’s Endeavour itself.

Visitors will be able to walk underneath the orbiter’s weathered underbelly, so close one can read the small, white lettering on each tile. Near the rear of the shuttle, there are about a dozen tiles that were damaged during Endeavour’s 25th and final mission, revealing what looks like Styrofoam underneath.

“It’s amazing,” said Diane Perlov, the museum’s deputy director of exhibits. “The first time I saw it — it brings tears to your eyes. It’s really something.”

The shuttle will be even more impressive in its permanent home in the Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center, Rudolph said. There, the shuttle will be displayed vertically as though it is about to launch, complete with an external tank and twin solid rocket boosters. That 170,000-square-foot facility, which will also feature exhibits on flight and space exploration, should open in about five years, Rudolph said.

Money for the temporary and permanent displays will come from a $200 million fundraising campaign. Rudolph said about 80 percent of that is earmarked for the new air and space wing.

“When we have it standing up vertically, there’s nothing in the world like it,” Rudolph said. “If you’re going to see one space shuttle, this is going to be it.”

The two other museums that house retired shuttles — the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum in New York City and the Smithsonian Institution’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia — both have reported increased attendance since their orbiters went on display. Rudolph said he expects the same boost for the Science Center, guessing the shuttle would bring attendance to about 2 million people per year, up from about 1.5 million.

Museum and NASA officials have repeatedly expressed their hope that Endeavour will encourage the next generation of engineers, scientists and astronauts.

“This thing will inspire kids to want to be astronauts,” said retired astronaut Mark Kelly, who commanded Endeavour’s last mission. “Maybe one of those little kids that will be looking up at this space shuttle will one day go and walk on Mars for the first time.”

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