« Reply #2 on: December 05, 2018, 01:29:45 PM »
Fortunately not completely:
Meanwhile, "Apollo to the Moon" is being replaced by "Destination Moon," a new gallery that will display many of the prior exhibition's artifacts while also expanding the focus of the hall.
"It is like ['Apollo to the Moon'] in the sense it covers the whole moon program, but it is going to be bigger," Neufeld explained. "It is going to cover all of history, from ancient dreams of going to the moon all the way up to the moon missions that are going on now."
"This new gallery will give the whole sweep of lunar exploration, with going to the moon in the 1960s as the core story," he said.
The new "Destination Moon" gallery is scheduled to debut to the public in 2022.
Also:
"We have other things here that you'll be able to see about Apollo. We have a lunar module in the main hall and it is going to stay there, open, until 2022," said Neufeld. "We will have Neil Armstrong's spacesuit opening [on display] in July 2019 for the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11. And we're going to have a special case of Apollo 11 astronaut artifacts in 2019."
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Robert Clark -
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