NASA locomotives depart Kennedy Space Center NEWSWIRE

NASA locomotives depart Kennedy Space Center NEWSWIRE

By Walter Scriptunas | April 15, 2015

| Last updated on November 3, 2020


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NASA2
FEC GP40-2 No. 427 pulls the two NASA Railroad switchers from the property on Friday.
NASA/Kim Shiflett
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – The locomotives that once helped NASA’s space shuttles on their journeys into space have departed the Kennedy Space Center in Florida after being sold under NASA’s Excess Program. The two EMD SW1500 locomotives, which were acquired by the NASA Railroad and put into service on the 38-mile short line in 1983, departed the spaceport with help from Florida East Coast GP40-2 No. 427 on April 10.

Following the end of the Space Shuttle Program in 2011, the railroad’s primary traffic source of hauling solid rocket booster segments ended. The segments were shipped to the Florida spaceport by rail from Orbital-ATK in Wasatch, Utah. Following each space shuttle launch, the boosters were dropped into the Atlantic ocean where they were picked up by boat, washed and disassembled before returning to Utah. There they were refurbished and reused on future shuttle missions.

NASA’s next program, the deep space, Space Launch System, will require the use of solid rocket boosters, however the flights will be much less frequent and the boosters will no longer be reused. This led to NASA’s decision to dispose of the locomotives.

Locomotive No. 1 is going to the Louisiana Natchitoches Parish Port Commission, and No. 3 will head to the Madison Railroad in southern Indiana. The third NASA SW1500, No. 2, left from Kennedy Space Center in March 2014 for the Gold Coast Railroad Museum in Miami, which also has one of NASA’s original Alco S2s.

So what does this mean for the future of the Kennedy Space Center rail service? The NASA Railroad as an entity is no more, however the trackage will still be in service as an active government rail line.

According to a NASA spokesperson, Florida East Coast will likely deliver the hardware for the first and possibly second Space Launch System missions and also provide Kennedy Space Center with any interim deliveries by rail. The track will continue to be maintained to NASA standards.

Over the long term, Kennedy Space Center rail service will likely depend on the Canaveral Port Authority’s proposal of operating 11 miles of new rail line south of Kennedy Space Center to Port Canaveral, which would also use 17 miles of the existing Kennedy Space Center trackage.

An Environmental Impact Study for that project is underway by the Surface Transportation Board.

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