http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/space/08/09/saving.skylab.ap/index.html

HUNTSVILLE, Alabama (AP) -- In its glory days, the aluminum-and-steel hulk
that sits outside the Alabama space museum was a training ground for
astronauts who flew in America's first space station.

Today, the full-size training mock-up of Skylab is slowly rotting away after
spending years on display at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center near NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center. Now resting in the parking lot, it has flecks
of gray paint from a wall dotting its mesh floor, and a bird's nest resting
in an equipment compartment.

An engineering group has begun a restoration project, but more help is
needed. All the work is being done by volunteers using off-the shelf
materials such as mildew remover from a discount store.

Tom Hancock, a board member of the American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics, is the leader of the project. He said he is working on the
restoration for people like his 18-year-old daughter.

"It's history. It's a chance for people my daughter's age to kick back and
see what it was like when I was young," said Hancock.

Made primarily from spare parts left over from the Apollo program, Skylab
orbited the Earth for six years beginning in 1973. It helped pave the way
for science projects aboard the space shuttle and the International Space
Station currently in orbit.

Astronauts learning to live in space trained in Skylab mock-ups at Marshall
and the Johnson Space Center in Houston. Three crews of three astronauts
each spent a total of 171 days in Skylab, which re-entered the atmosphere in
a fiery blaze in 1979.

"We called it a part-task trainer," said Garriott. "You might bring a few
experiments at a time to work on them.

The Skylab mock-up was displayed for years inside the Space and Rocket
Center. But exhibits change, and it was eventually moved outside to a back
lot.

The museum is owned by the state and survives mainly on admissions.
Chronically underfunded, the center couldn't afford to do anything in the
name of preservation other than take up the Army on its offer to cover the
mock-up in white plastic.

"They wrapped with shrink wrap. It's so large it's hard to put a cover
over," said museum curator Irene Willhite.

That was about six years ago; the plastic has since ripped to pieces.
Partiers found the Skylab and did their thing, leaving empty drink cans and
taking pieces of equipment once worth thousands of dollars.

Members of the engineering group realized the poor condition of the mock-up
in July and began work to restore the first of its five huge sections, the
compartment where astronauts trained for experiments they later performed in
space.

Hancock had to use a broom to chase off a couple of raccoons that were
nesting in the floor, and volunteers cleaned up fabric ductwork and
equipment that was coated in green algae and mildew.

The restoration should take about a year. After that, officials plan to move
the Skylab replica into a building that's being built to house a full-size
Saturn V moon rocket that was recently restored.

Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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