Prescreening Available From GSA Online
Even if your school or museum wasn't selected to display a
decommissioned space shuttle, there are still opportunities for
acquiring artifacts from the space program. NASA is inviting
eligible education institutions, museums and other organizations to
examine and request space program artifacts online. The items
represent significant human space flight technologies, processes
and accomplishments from NASA's past and present space exploration
programs.
NASA partnered with the General Services Administration to
provide a first-of-its-kind, Web-based, electronic artifacts
prescreening capability last year. On Oct. 1, 2009, the GSA
launched a Web initiative for screening and requesting NASA's space
shuttle artifacts. The first round ended Nov. 30, and all 913
artifacts were allocated.
A second Web-based screening opportunity begins Tuesday. It
includes approximately 2,500 potential artifacts from NASA programs
that include the space shuttle, Hubble Space Telescope, Apollo,
Mercury, and Gemini.
Each artifact will be screened for 90 days. After the screening
period closes, and at the completion of the allocation process,
requestors will be notified about the status of their request.
Museums and schools will be screened for eligibility through
an online registration process or through their state agency for
surplus property. Eligible recipients may view the available
artifacts and request specific items at the Web site. Prescreening
allows potential recipients to identify specific items and provides
the time to plan to transport, preserve and properly display
artifacts.
Requesting an artifact through the prescreening process does not
guarantee the item will be available. Nor does it provide a
specific time when it will become available. Allocated artifacts
will be incrementally released as they are no longer needed by NASA
and in accordance with export control laws and regulations.
Although the artifacts are provided without charge, eligible
recipients must cover shipping and any special handling costs.
Shipping fees on smaller items will be relatively inexpensive,
while larger items may involve extensive disassembly, preparation,
shipping and reassembly costs. NASA will work closely with
potential recipients, on a case-by-case basis, to address any
unique special handling costs.