Kennedy Space Center is situated on the East Coast of Central Florida about an
Hour from Orlando.
Kennedy Space Center
An aerial view of the Launch Complex 39 area shows the Vehicle Assembly Building
(center), with the Launch Control Center on its right.
The John F. Kennedy Space Center (KSC) is the NASA space vehicle launch facility
(spaceport) on Merritt Island in Florida. The site is near Cape Canaveral, midway
between Miami and Jacksonville, Florida. It is 34 miles long and around 6 miles
wide, covering 219 square miles. Around 17,000 people work at the site.
Kennedy Space Center tour bus.
There is a visitor center and public tours and KSC is a major tourist destination
for visitors to Florida. Because much of KSC is off limits to development, the site
also serves as an important wildlife sanctuary, it’s quite common to see Alligators
and to be bitten by Mosquitoes Only 9% of the land is developed. Mosquito Lagoon,
The Indian River, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge and Canaveral National
Seashore are also features of this area.
KSC Visitors Center Front Entrance.
The announcement of the lunar program led to an expansion of operations from the
Cape to the adjacent Merritt Island. NASA began acquisition in 1962, by outright
purchase. In July 1962 the site was named the Launch Operations Center. It was renamed
the John F. Kennedy Space Center in November 1963, after the recently assassinated
president John F. Kennedy. The lunar project had three stages—Mercury,
Gemini and Apollo. The objective of Mercury was to orbit and retrieve
a manned Earth satellite. The project started in October 1957 using the Atlas ICBM
as the base to carry the Mercury payload. but early testing used the Redstone rocket
for a series of suborbital flights including the 15-minute flights of Alan Shepard
on May 5 and Virgil Grissom on July 21, 1961. The first human carried by an Atlas
was John Glenn on February 20, 1962.
From the knowledge gained through Mercury the more complex two-man capsules of Gemini
were prepared as was a new launcher based on the Titan II ICBM. The first manned
flight took place on March 23, 1965 with John Young and Virgil Grissom. Gemini 4
featured the first American extravehicular activity, by Edward H. White. There were
twelve Gemini launches from KSC.
The rollout of STS-36
The Apollo program had another new launcher—the three-stage Saturn V (111
m high and 10 m in diameter), built by Boeing (first stage), North American Aviation
(engines and second stage) and Douglas Aircraft (third stage). North American Aviation
also made the command and service modules while Grumman Aircraft Engineering constructed
the lunar lander. IBM, MIT and GE provided instrumentation
Shuttle launches
KSC is now the launch site for the Space Shuttle, reusing the Complex 39 Apollo
infrastructure. The first launch was of Columbia on April 12, 1981. KSC also has
a landing site for the orbiter, the 2.9 mile (4.6 km) Shuttle Landing Facility.
However, the first end-of-mission Shuttle landing at KSC did not take place until
February 11, 1984, when Challenger completed STS-41-B; the primary landing site
had until that time been Edwards Air Force Base in California. Twenty-five flights
had been completed by September 1988, with a large hiatus from January 28, 1986,
to September 29, 1988, following the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster (which was
the first shuttle launch from Pad 39B).
The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex is home to a number of museums, two IMAX
theatres, and various bus tours allowing visitors a closer look at various restricted
areas that would otherwise not be possible. This works by running tour buses constantly
around the center and you get off at each location and rejoin the tour at your leisure. Included
in the base admission is tour-bus transportation into the restricted area to an
observation gantry on the grounds of Launch complex 39, and to the Apollo-Saturn
V Center. The observation gantry provides unobstructed views of both launch pads
and all of Kennedy Space Center property. The Apollo-Saturn V Center is a large
museum built around its centerpiece exhibit, a restored Saturn V launch vehicle,
and features other space related exhibits, including an Apollo capsule. Two theaters
allow the visitor to relive parts of the Apollo program. One simulates the environment
inside an Apollo-era firing room during an Apollo launch, and another simulates
the Apollo 11 landing. The tour also includes a visit to a building where modules
for the International Space Station are tested.
The Visitor Complex also includes two facilities run by the Astronauts Memorial
Foundation. The most visible of these is the Astronaut Memorial, also known as the
Space Mirror, a huge black granite mirror
The Space Mirror at Kennedy Space center Florida
engraved with the names of all astronauts who died in the line of duty. These names
are constantly illuminated from behind, with natural light when possible, and artificial
light when necessary. The glowing names seem to float in a reflection of the sky.
The mirror moves with the seasons and illuminates the names of those that died on
the anniversary of their deaths. Supplemental displays nearby give the details of
the lives and deaths of the astronauts memorialised. Elsewhere on the Visitor Complex
grounds is the Foundation's Center for Space Education, which includes a resource
center for teachers, among other facilities
More info can be found on the Florida Villas forums
or The Perfect Florida Guide