visibility Similar

Steel for the south creeper crane.

Stadsarchief Amsterdam, Afb 010179000523

(TRACT) Transport Rotorcraft Aircraft Testbed

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - In Launch Complex 39 at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, this crane raised all of the outside walls of the Propellants North Administrative and Maintenance Facility over a period of two days. Concrete layers on either side of high-density foam insulation in the facility's walls will prevent any transfer of radiant heat between the exterior and interior of the buildings. A tilt-up construction method is being used to erect a THERMOMASS concrete wall insulation system for the facility's walls. In this approach, the exterior layer of concrete for the wall panels is poured and leveled on the building's footprint. Then, prefabricated, predrilled insulation sheets are arranged on top of the unhardened concrete, and connectors, designed to hold the sandwiched layers of concrete and insulation secure, are inserted through the predrilled holes. Next, the structural wythe is poured. Once cured, these panels are lifted upright to form the building's envelope. The facility will have a two-story administrative building to house managers, mechanics and technicians who fuel spacecraft at Kennedy adjacent to an 1,800-square-foot single-story shop to store cryogenic fuel transfer equipment. The new facility will feature high-efficiency roofs and walls, “Cool Dry Quiet” air conditioning with energy recovery technology, efficient lighting, and other sustainable features. The facility is striving to qualify for the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED, Platinum certification. If successful, Propellants North will be the first Kennedy facility to achieve this highest of LEED ratings after it is completed in the summer of 2010. The facility was designed for NASA by Jones Edmunds and Associates. Photo credit: NASA/Jim Grossmann KSC-2010-1160

Hulpstuk aan Nederlands grootste werkkraan in Waalhaven

Hoover Dam, Nevada State Switchyard, U.S. Highway 93, Boulder City, Clark County, NV

TEST - APOLLO GENERAL WATER IMPACT

Swedish Navy & Swedish Warships V15084

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Workers in the Vehicle Assembly Building maneuver equipment in place to remove Main Engine No. 1 from Space Shuttle Atlantis in the Vehicle Assembly Building. An inventory review concerning defective main engine fuel pump tip seals indicated that defective seals may be present on the fuel pump for the engine. The decision was made to replace the suspect engine with one originally slated for Discovery. The main engine nozzles, visible in the photo, are 7.8 feet across and 9.4 feet high. Space Shuttle Atlantis is scheduled to launch no earlier than April 17, 2000, on mission STS-101 to resupply the International Space Station for the arrival of the next pressurized module, the Russian-built Zvezda KSC-00pp0375

code Related

Ukraine - ICBM SILO - Demontageprojekt, WGI, März 2002 - Vier Lagerhallen PKhZ

description

Zusammenfassung

Ukraine - ICBM SILO - Demontageprojekt, WGI, März 2002 - Vier Lagerhallen PKhZ

Nichts gefunden.

label_outline

Tags

Ukraine icbm Silo ICBM-Silo Demontage Projekt Rückbauprojekt wgi Lagerung Lagerhallen pkhz vier Lagerhallen pkhz Kirchengebäude Baustellen uns Nationalarchive
date_range

Datum

1996 - 2001
create

Quelle

The U.S. National Archives
link

Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
copyright

Copyright-info

No known copyright restrictions

label_outline Explore Four Storage Warehouses Pkhz, Pkhz, Wgi

Themen

Ukraine icbm Silo ICBM-Silo Demontage Projekt Rückbauprojekt wgi Lagerung Lagerhallen pkhz vier Lagerhallen pkhz Kirchengebäude Baustellen uns Nationalarchive