In June, NASA finished work on a huge construction
project here in Mississippi: a $349 million laboratory tower, designed
to test a new rocket engine in a chamber that mimicked the vacuum of
space.
Then, NASA did something odd.
As soon as the work was done, it shut the tower down. The project was
officially “mothballed” — closed up and left empty — without ever being
used...
The reason for the shutdown: The new tower — called the A-3 test
stand — was useless. Just as expected. The rocket program it was
designed for had been canceled in 2010.
But, at first, cautious NASA bureaucrats didn’t want to stop the
construction on their own authority. And then Congress — at the urging
of a senator from Mississippi — swooped in and ordered the agency to
finish the tower, no matter what.
The result was that NASA spent four more years building something it
didn’t need. Now, the agency will spend about $700,000 a year to
maintain it in disuse...
So the tower stand has taken its place on NASA’s long list of living
dead. Last year, the agency’s inspector general found six other test
stands that were either in “mothball” status, or about to be. Some
hadn’t been used since the 1990s. Together, those seven cost NASA more
than $100,000 a year to maintain.
More grim details at the Washington Post.
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