Shuttle Discovery Flies Over Washington D.C. to New Home

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Space Shuttle Discovery, atop its Shuttle Carrier Aircraft, NASA 905, flew over the US national capital region on April 17, 2012 on the final leg of its ferry flight from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida to Dulles International Airport in Virginia, on the way to its final home at the National And & Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. The image above shows the duo flying near the U.S. Capitol and the video below shows views of Discovery from various vantage points in Washington D.C.

Discovery, the first orbiter retired from NASA’s shuttle fleet, completed 39 missions, spent 365 days in space, orbited the Earth 5,830 times, and traveled 238539663.3 km (148,221,675 miles). Discovery new mission will be to “commemorate past achievements in space and to educate and inspire future generations of explorers,” NASA says.

You can see more images at NASA’s Flickr page.

Here’s a video taken by Joy Hargraves who went to the Udvar-Hazy Center today to watch the Shuttle Discovery come in to her final resting place:

5 Replies to “Shuttle Discovery Flies Over Washington D.C. to New Home”

    1. Yes, they are T. Scott Kreilick, John Klinkose, and Pavel Efremoff from Kreilick Conservation, LLC, there to conserve the Statue of Freedom.

    2. Yes, they are T. Scott Kreilick, John Klinkose, and Pavel Efremoff from Kreilick Conservation, LLC, there to conserve the Statue of Freedom.

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