LOS ANGELES -- It was supposed to be a slow but smooth journey to
retirement, a parade through city streets for a shuttle that logged
millions of miles in space.
But Endeavour's final mission turned
out to be a logistical headache that delayed its arrival to its museum
resting place by about 17 hours.
After a 12-mile weave past trees
and utility poles that included thousands of adoring onlookers, flashing
cameras and even the filming of a TV commercial, Endeavour arrived at
the California Science Center Sunday to a greeting party of city leaders
and other dignitaries that had expected it many hours earlier.
Endeavour was still inching toward a hangar on the grounds of the museum mid-Sunday afternoon.
"It's
like Christmas!" said Mark Behn, 55, a member of the museum ground
support team who watched the shuttle's snail-like approach from inside
the hangar. "We've waited so long and been told so many things about
when it would get here. But here it is, and it's a dream come true."
Movers
had planned a slow trip, saying the shuttle that once orbited at more
than 17,000 mph would move at just 2 mph in its final voyage through
Inglewood and southern Los Angeles.
But that estimate turned out
to be generous, with Endeavour often creeping along at a barely
detectable pace when it wasn't at a dead stop due to
difficult-to-maneuver obstacles like tree branches and light posts.
Another delay came in the early morning hours Sunday when the shuttle's remote-controlled, 160-wheel carrier began leaking oil.
Despite
the holdups, the team charged with transporting the shuttle felt a
"great sense of accomplishment" when it made it onto the museum grounds,
said Jim Hennessy, a spokesman for Sarens, the contract mover.
"It's
historic and will be a great memory," he said. "Not too many people
will be able to match that, to say 'we moved the space shuttle through
the streets of Inglewood and Los Angeles.'"
Transporting Endeavour
cross-town was a costly feat with an estimated price tag of $10
million, to be paid for by the science center and private donations.
Late
Friday, crews spent hours transferring the shuttle to a special,
lighter towing dolly for its trip over Interstate 405. The dolly was
pulled across the Manchester Boulevard bridge by a Toyota Tundra pickup,
and the car company filmed the event for a commercial after paying for a
permit, turning the entire scene into a movie set complete with special
lighting, sound and staging.
Saturday started off promising, with
Endeavour 90 minutes ahead of schedule. But accumulated hurdles and
hiccups caused it to run hours behind at day's end.
Some 400 trees
had been removed along the route, but officials said most of the trees
that gave them trouble could not be cut down because they were old or
treasured for other reasons, including some planted in honor of Martin
Luther King Jr.
The crowd had its problems too. Despite
temperatures in the mid-70s, several dozen people were treated for
heat-related injuries after a long day in the sun, according to fire
officials.
But it was a happy, peaceful crowd, with firefighters
having only to respond to a sheared hydrant and a small rubbish fire,
and no reports of any arrests.
And despite the late problems the mood for most of the day was festive.
At
every turn of Endeavour's slow-speed commute through urban streets,
spectators jammed intersections as the shuttle nosed past stores,
schools, churches and front yards through the working-class streets of
southern Los Angeles. Sidewalks were off limits due to Endeavour's
enormous wingspan.
Endeavour's arrival in Los Angeles was a
homecoming. It may have zipped around the Earth nearly 4,700 times, but
its roots are solidly grounded in California. Its main engines were
fashioned in the San Fernando Valley. The heat tiles were invented in
Silicon Valley. Its "fly-by-wire" technology was developed in the Los
Angeles suburb of Downey. In 1991, it rolled off the assembly line in
the Mojave Desert to replace Challenger, which blew up during liftoff in
1986.
As Endeavour shuffled by crowds, its age was evident after 123 million miles in space and two dozen re-entries.
Stephanie
Gibbs, a longtime Inglewood resident, passed the Forum, where Endeavour
made a pit stop Saturday, many times in her life. But she wasn't
prepared for what she saw.
"There was a space shuttle blocking the street and I said, 'Whoa,'" she said.
Gibbs,
who lives off Crenshaw Drive, the narrowest section of the move, would
like to see a sign designating it as a shuttle crossing.
"We've been on the map" because of the Lakers, she said. "This kind of highlights it more."
Associated Press