Politics & Government

Crowd Sees Space Shuttle Endeavour To New Home

Patch photos highlight its 12-mile journey from LAX to the California Science Center.

 

The space shuttle Endeavour reached its new permanent home at the California Science Center in Exposition Park Sunday to the cheers of thousands.

The shuttle's final mission — a 12-mile tedious crawl down city streets from Los Angeles International Airport to the science center — was dubbed "The Big Endeavour" and easily lived up to its nickname during a journey that began early Friday morning and ended at around 1 p.m. Sunday.

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  • RELATED: A full rundown and photo gallery of the shuttle's entire journey blogged live from the field.

Endeavour's last miles were a nip and tuck affair, as trimmers tried to snip the bare minimum of branches from trees planted in the late 1980s to honor the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on the boulevard named in his honor.

"Its journey is slow and steady but it is momentous," Los Angles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa told a crowd of thousands assembled at a Baldwin Hills mall on Saturday.

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When the shuttle finally arrived at the science center Sunday, Villaraigosa declared Endeavour's final mission "accomplished."

"Wow, what a journey," the mayor told the crowd. "This was not just a once in a lifetime event, but a once event."

California Science Center President Jeff Rudolph also spoke at the finish line and thanked the people of Los Angles and Inglewood for their support.

"I may be kicked for it, but it was the mother of all parades," Rudolph said, drawing applause from the crowd.

Throughout the shuttle's route, officials estimated a collective crowd of more than 1 million turned out to experience the once-in-a-lifetime event and witness a piece of history roll by. 

In the end, families could gather kids and grandparents together within feet of the shuttle to take pictures that could well be seen by generations to come.

LAPD reported that no arrests were made during the entire trip and crowds were well behaved.

"This is the best, most enthusiastic crowd we have ever worked with," said Los Angeles Police Department Chief Charlie Beck, citing his 35 years of experience with crowds in Los Angeles.

With up-close and personal access at multiple points along the shuttle's route, it was a unique spectacle and emotional moment for many.

"Father God, I didn't get to go to space, but you brought the space to me today," said Inglewood resident Marilyn Williams as she stood on Crenshaw Drive Saturday morning telling friends about her fascination with the space program.

The move is expected to cost about $10 million, and a fundraising campaign has begun to build a permanent hangar for the 122-foot-long orbiter.

The shuttle will soon be on public display in a temporary building at the California Science Center starting on Oct. 30. It will be free to view the shuttle but advance reservation times are recommended due to the expected large turnout.

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