NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory Has a Bold, New Look
A giant version of NASA's classic red, white, and blue logo now proudly adorns a building that has played a central role in space-exploration history.
A new
30-foot NASA logo has been installed on the side of the Spacecraft Assembly
Facility at the Jet Propulsion Lab to welcome JPLers and visitors alike. The red,
white, and blue insignia - designed in 1959 and nicknamed "the
meatball" - went up on Oct. 17 and can be spotted
from the freeway nearby.
"We have two strands of DNA - one NASA
and one Caltech. We wanted to proudly show our NASA heritage with this
logo," said JPL Director Michael Watkins. "With the appearance of the
new sign, I think that more than a few people will be surprised to realize
there's a NASA center tucked away right here in the foothills of the San
Gabriel Mountains."
Weighing 6.5
tons, the logo is a vinyl covering stretched over
an aluminum frame, then fastened to a steel structural ring. It was assembled
in a parking lot at JPL before being hoisted via a 50-ton crane and fastened
onto the side of the High Bay of the Spacecraft Assembly Facility, the
robot factory where NASA's twin Voyager spacecraft,
Galileo, and all of the agency's Mars rovers were built. Structural steel beams
were welded in place to support the new sign.
The
job of creating, sizing, and placing the sign fell to The Studio, part of JPL's
graphic design and visual strategy team. The historic location they chose for
the sign was only fitting, although the decision was grounded in pragmatism.
"We
were trying to find a building that worked both in location and was the right
size, height, and shape," said Dan Goods, manager of The Studio. "While
we were originally just looking for a proper surface, the fact that it's our
High Bay was a happy accident that gives it more significance."
JPL's location at the base of the foothills
dates back to 1936, when a group of rocket enthusiasts, working under Caltech
graduate student Frank Malina, conducted
rocket-firing tests at the site. JPL, a
division of Caltech, grew throughout the 1940s and '50s and ultimately built
and helped launch America's first satellite, Explorer 1, in 1958. By the end of
that year, Congress established NASA and JPL became a part of the agency.
Caltech manages JPL for NASA.
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