CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
_ Still picking up the pieces after Hurricane Frances, NASA braced on Thursday
for the even more menacing Ivan, hurriedly moving mangled strips of aluminum
siding and exposed equipment into the hangar that once housed the wreckage of
space shuttle Columbia.
Forecasters say Ivan could
veer close to Cape Canaveral early next week.
Last weekend, Frances peeled
820 aluminum panels off NASA's 52-story Vehicle Assembly Building and sent them
flying, smashing car and truck windshields. On Thursday, the space agency rushed
to collect the bent 4-by-16-foot panels for fear they could turn into flying
shrapnel again if Hurricane Ivan blows this way. The panels were moved to a
Kennedy Space Center hangar farther inland.
Cleanup crews also rushed
to gather computers and other equipment in buildings left roofless by Frances
and put them in the hangar.
Among the critical items
going into the structure: any salvageable machinery used to make the thermal
tiles and blankets that cover the space shuttles and protect against the heat
of re-entry. The tile shop lost a chunk of its roof in what could represent
one of the biggest blows to NASA's effort to resume shuttle flights next spring.
NASA officials refuse to
speculate on whether they will be able to launch Discovery as planned next March
or April, given the hurricane damage to Kennedy Space Center so far, and with
more storm fury possibly on the way.
Hurricane Charley last month
caused $700,000 worth of damage to Kennedy Space Center. No damage estimate
is available yet for Frances.
The space center remains
closed to most of its 14,000 employees until Monday, and could stay shut even
longer if Ivan hits.
Right after the Columbia
catastrophe on Feb. 1, 2003, the charred, twisted remnants of the shuttle were
taken from Texas and Louisiana to the huge, sturdy hangar near the shuttle landing
strip, where the pieces were laid out on the floor to assist in the accident
investigation. Last September, the pieces were moved out of the hangar to the
Apollo-era Vehicle Assembly Building, where shuttles are mounted to their booster
rockets and fuel tanks prior to launch.
Although Frances left hundreds
of gaping holes in the assembly building, Columbia's remains were dry and safe
on the 16th level, said NASA spokesman Mike Rein. The 84,000-plus pieces are
stored in a secure room on the westernmost side of the building, which was not
defaced by Frances.
"We got lucky there," Rein
said.