Suggested Searches

7 min read

Building on a Mission: The Houston Mission Control Center

NASA’s Mission Control Center (MCC) in Houston has served as the nerve center for American human spaceflight since June 1965. Perhaps the most visible aspect of human spaceflight, the MCC is the familiar scene on television of flight controllers monitoring all aspects of a mission on their consoles, with large screens displaying the location of the spacecraft on a world map. Following the establishment of the Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC), now NASA’s Johnson Space Center (JSC), in 1961, and construction of the new facility, the mission control function shifted from Cape Kennedy in Florida to Houston. The concepts of mission control developed in the early years of the space program are still in use today, even as human missions have grown more complex and now include international and commercial partners. Starting with missions lasting only a few hours or a few days, monitoring of the International Space Station is an ongoing round-the-clock activity. Over the decades, upgrades to the MCC have enabled it to keep up with the demands of the ever-growing complexity of America’s human spaceflight programs.

mcc_under_construction_still_from_video_jun_25_1963 mcc_under_construction_still_from_video_jun_25_1963
Two views of early construction of what was then called the Integrated Mission Control Center in June 1963. Left: The administration wing. Right: The mission operations wing.

In the early days of America’s space program, NASA’s first flight director, Christopher C. Kraft, developed the concept of a mission control center to monitor human spaceflights. The first control center at the Cape Kennedy Air Force Station, now the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, in Florida monitored the Mercury and early Gemini missions. With the establishment of the MSC in Houston in 1961, the new facility’s main tasks included the control of America’s human spaceflights. The new MCC offered many advantages over the older control center at the Cape, including the flexibility needed for the more complex Gemini missions, and especially the Apollo Moon landing missions. Work on the MCC, located in MSC’s Building 30, began in late 1962 with the laying of its foundation. The construction took place between June 1963 and November 1964. In its original form, the three-story MCC included an administration wing of offices and conference rooms, and a mission operations wing that housed two Mission Operations Control Rooms (MOCRs), the two wings joined by a lobby wing. Workers installed the MCC’s real-time computer complex, the brains of the installation, in April 1964. Two months later, employees moved from temporary facilities in the Stahl and Myers and Houston Petroleum Center buildings in southeast Houston into Building 30 to begin testing the equipment.

mcc_under_construction_1964 building_on_a_mission_mcc
Then and now. Left: The Mission Control Center (MCC) as it appeared in June 1964. Right: The MCC in September 2021, showing the addition of the five-story Station Operations Wing on the left side of the image.

By January 1965, enough of the equipment had been installed and tested that a team of controllers could monitor the flight of the uncrewed Gemini 2 mission, with primary control of the flight still residing in the Gemini Control Center at Cape Kennedy.

mcc_during_gemini_2_jan_19_1965 mcc_during_gemini_2_jan_19_1965
Left: View of the Mission Operations Control Room during the uncrewed Gemini 2 mission on Jan. 19, 1965. Right: One of the flight controllers monitoring the Gemini 2 mission.

During the March 23, 1965 Gemini 3 mission, the first crewed Gemini flight, the MOCR served in a backup capacity to the Gemini Control Center at the Cape. Following that successful activity, on April 9, NASA Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight George E. Mueller announced the change of primary flight control for human space missions from the Cape to the new MCC in Houston. He also announced that Kraft would serve as mission director for Gemini IV and as one of the three flight directors for the mission. John D. Hodge and Eugene F. “Gene” Kranz would serve as the other two flight directors during the historic four-day mission that included America’s first spacewalk. Hodge and Kranz both served as flight directors with Kraft during Mercury missions.

mcc_during_gemini_3_mar_23_1965 building_on_a_mission_mcc_8_fds_feb_1965
Left: During Gemini 3, the first crewed Gemini mission on March 23, 1965, the Mission Operations Control Room (MOCR) served in a backup capacity to the primary control center in Cape Kennedy, Florida. Right: Flight Directors Eugene F. “Gene” Kranz, Glynn S. Lunney, and John D. Hodge, with the original Flight Director Christopher C. Kraft pose in the MOCR in February 1965.

mcc_during_gemini_iv mcc_during_gemini_iv
Left: The Mission Operations Control Room (MOCR) during the Gemini IV mission in June 1965, the first mission controlled from the Houston facility. Right: Families of the Gemini IV astronauts talk with them from the MOCR.

With two operational MOCRs, following Gemini IV the remaining eight Gemini missions were controlled from the room on the third floor of Building 30’s mission operations wing. Engineers configured the MOCR on the second floor to monitor the early uncrewed Apollo test flights in 1966. After completion of the Gemini program in November 1966, the third-floor MOCR was modified to support the upcoming Apollo missions, with the two rooms dividing the work. Following the historic Apollo 11 Moon landing mission in July 1969, controlled from the third-floor MOCR-2, the second-floor MOCR-1 was temporarily deactivated until October 1971. It was then used to monitor the Skylab and Apollo-Soyuz Test Project missions, while MOCR-2 was deactivated in May 1973.

mcc_apollo_11_splashdown_jul_24_1969 apollo_13_mcc_slayton_showing_lioh_adaptor
Left: Jubilation in the Mission Operations Control Room (MOCR) following the Apollo 11 splashdown. Right: Engineers and managers confer in the MOCR shortly after an explosion crippled Apollo 13 on its way to the Moon.

In the mid-1970s, In preparation for the space shuttle era, the MCC received upgrades to its computer systems. The third-floor MOCR-2, renamed the Flight Control Room-2 (FCR-2), monitored the Approach and Landing Test (ALT) flights of space shuttle Enterprise in 1977, following which it and the second-floor control room, redesignated FCR-1, received upgrades to support the first space shuttle orbital missions. In April 1981, FCR-1 supported the STS-1 mission of space shuttle Columbia. In November 1982, FCR-2 supported its first mission, STS-5.

mcc_sts-1_landing_apr_14_1981
The Mission Operations Control Room following the landing of space shuttle Columbia to conclude the STS-1 mission.

In December 1989, both control rooms received significant upgrades in the form of new glass display screens and image projectors. In December 1992, FCR-2 was decommissioned as an active control room and returned to its Apollo-era configuration and made accessible to visitors, while FCR-1 continued to support shuttle missions until 1996. Beginning in 1992, a new control room called the White FCR in the newly-built five-story Station Operations Wing, the largest addition to the MCC, began partially supporting space shuttle missions. Following a two-year transition, the White FCR took over sole operation of shuttle missions with the STS-77 mission in May 1996 until the end of the program in 2011. The Blue FCR in the new wing supported space station operations from 1998 until 2006 when that function moved into the newly-renovated FCR-1, with all-new state-of-the-art equipment. Today, the White FCR is used for simulations of upcoming flights around the Moon as part of the Artemis program.

building_on_a_mission_mcc building_on_a_mission_mcc
Left: Flight controllers monitor a spacewalk on the space station from the Flight Control Room-1 (FCR-1) in September 2021. Right: Controllers conduct a simulation of the Artemis 1 mission in the White FCR in June 2021.

The MCC is truly an historic place, serving as the nerve center of the American human spaceflight program for more than five decades. It bore witness to great triumphs such as the first human Moon landing, as well as tragedies such as the Challenger and Columbia space shuttle accidents. In October 1985, the U.S. Department of the Interior designated MOCR-2 as a National Historic Landmark known as the “Apollo Mission Control Center.” On April 4, 2011, the building was renamed the “Christopher C. Kraft, Jr. Mission Control Center,” in honor of the man who created the concepts still in use today in human spaceflight control. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landing, the historic MOCR 2 underwent a two-year restoration to return the room to a configuration identical to the one on July 20, 1969. A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held on June 28, 2019, attended by NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine and Flight Director Kranz. The restored facility can be viewed by the public on tours from Space Center Houston.

kraft_mission_control_dedication kraft_mission_control_dedication
Left: In 2011, Christopher C. Kraft speaks at the ceremony naming Building 30 in his honor. Right: The unveiling of the sign bearing Kraft’s name.

building_on_a_mission_mcc mcc_mission_operations_control_room
Left: Ribbon-cutting ceremony for the restored Apollo Control Room on June 28, 2019. Right: Overview of the restored Apollo Control Room.

To be continued…