
Yesterday, I shared photos of Y’s and my trip to the Stephen Udvar-Hazy Center of the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum (NASM). Today, I have some photos of our stop at the NASM on the National Mall in Washington, DC.
I think of museums of technology, like the NASM, as a kind of technical communication medium. Of course, the work of the displays, diagrams, multimedia, and explanatory text are different kinds of technical communication created to facilitate learning, contextualization, and curiosity. But, the museum as a whole–the system of the museum and its totality, its holism–is a giant technical communication medium, too.
Most of the exhibits seemed similar to the last time that I had visited Washington in the late 1980s, but one notable change is the restoration of the shooting model of Star Trek’s USS-1701 Enterprise, which used to hang in the air but it now at eye-level and encased in plastic (last photos below).
After our visit, the NASM did a big renovation of the museum on the National Mall and the Udvar-Hazy Center (i.e., the replacement of Space Shuttle Enterprise with Discovery).
Above and below, you can see Charles Lindbergh’s Atlantic-crossing Spirit of St. Louis. More pictures of the historic air and spacecraft on display follow.
Spirit of St. Louis

Hughes H-1 Racer





Supermarine Spitfire HF. Mk. VIIc

North American P-51D Mustang

Messerschmitt Bf 109 G-6/R3

Messerschmitt Me 262 A-1a Schwalbe (Swallow)




Mitsubishi A6M5 Reisen (Zero Fighter) Model 52 ZEKE



North American X-15


Douglas D-558-2

Lockheed F-104 Starfighter


Grumman X-29 full-scale model


SpaceShipOne and Bell X-1

SpaceShipOne

Bell X-1

John Glenn’s Spacesuit

Space Capsule Interior

Apollo 11 Command Module



Apollo Command Module Console

Lunar Module LM-2

Apollo-Soyuz Rendezvous Recreation


V-2 Rocket, Skylab, and V-1 Rocket




Viking Mars Lander

SAGE Core Memory Unit 11, IBM AN/FSQ-7

Boeing X-45A Unmanned Vehicle

Star Trek Shooting Model of the USS-1701 Enterprise




















































































































