The Columbus Dispatch

Air and Space galleries to close for renovation­s

- By Peggy McGlone

WASHINGTON — Fans of the National Air and Space Museum have two months to visit their favorite attraction­s before a massive renovation closes portions of the building.

Beginning Dec. 3, two galleries of the Smithsonia­n museum — one of the mostvisite­d museums in the world — will be closed for the start of a seven-year, $1 billion renovation. The entire building, featuring all new exhibition­s and gallery displays, won’t reopen until 2025.

The 42-year-old facility will remain partially open as work begins on the costliest project the Smithsonia­n has ever undertaken. Mechanical systems will be upgraded, the stone exterior replaced, the entrance on the Mall improved and 23 galleries and presentati­on spaces will be updated.

Many of the most popular attraction­s, such as the Spirit of St. Louis and the 1903 Wright Flyer, will remain on view for the first part of the project.

“We are a well-loved museum, and that’s part of the reason we’re falling The National Air and Space Museum in Washington will undergo renovation­s expected to last until 2025.

apart,” museum director Ellen Stofan said about the project. “We’re updating everything. It’s going to look a lot different inside.”

Six years in the planning, the renovation will be funded by about $700 million in federal aid, including $50 million for new storage space, and $250 million in

private donations for new exhibition­s. The museum has raised about $70 million toward its goal, Stofan said.

The museum initially will close “Apollo to the Moon” and “Looking at Earth,” two galleries on the eastern side of the building that stretches along Independen­ce Avenue from

Fourth to Seventh streets.

In January, seven more galleries — representi­ng most of the western side of the building — will shutter, including exhibition­s focused on the golden age of flight, World War I, World War II and jet aviation and sea-air operations.

The public will be invited to watch as officials remove the artifacts from the seven galleries, Stofan said. “We want people to be looking over our shoulder,” she said.

Among the items being removed will be the Douglas DC-3, Boeing 747 nose, and the Supermarin­e Spitfire Mk. VIII. The virtual reality and flight simulators will be closed temporaril­y as they are relocated to the eastern side of the building.

The galleries will reopen in 2022 with Destinatio­n Moon, a redesigned exhibition of the popular Apollo missions, and other exhibits. Stofan said she hopes the displays will bring back some of the museum’s original wow factor.

“When it opened, it was a place of the future,” she said. “Over the years we’ve been more of a history museum. We’ve lost a little bit of that science and technology center.”

Upcoming phases also will include the closing of the entrance on the Mall, the Imax theater and the planetariu­m.

The museum expects most of the eastern galleries will remain open until 2022, when the first refurbishe­d exhibits come on view. The entire project is expected to be completed in 2025.

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