TL;DR: ZGF Architects just finished the Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center in LA — 200,000 square feet of new building designed around a single, irreplaceable object: Space Shuttle Endeavour. Let that sink in for a second. The shuttle is 122 feet long, 78 feet wide, and weighs 172,000 pounds without fuel.

ZGF Architects just finished the Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center in LA — 200,000 square feet of new building designed around a single, irreplaceable object: Space Shuttle Endeavour.

Let that sink in for a second. The shuttle is 122 feet long, 78 feet wide, and weighs 172,000 pounds without fuel. The building didn't come first. The shuttle's dimensions, weight distribution, and display orientation set the structural parameters, and ZGF had to design everything around those constraints.

I've worked on complex projects — data centers, transit stations, buildings where systems had to perform under zero-tolerance conditions. But building around a fixed centerpiece of that scale is a different kind of problem. You're not designing a building and then figuring out what goes inside. You're designing a precision enclosure for something that can never be moved again.

From a construction standpoint, a few things this project almost certainly required:

Structural load design from the inside out. The shuttle's support points dictate column placement, foundation design, and slab requirements. You're not starting with a grid — you're reverse-engineering the grid from the artifact.

Climate and humidity control at museum-grade. NASA hardware exposed to variable humidity will corrode. The HVAC system in this building isn't just about visitor comfort — it's about preserving the shuttle for the next 100 years. That's a completely different design brief than a typical commercial building.

Sight-line engineering. Endeavour is displayed in launch position — vertical, nose up. That means the ceiling height has to clear 185 feet of shuttle stack. The entire visitor flow, mezzanine levels, and exhibit placement are organized around that single vertical sight line.

Construction sequencing around an immovable object. The shuttle was installed before the building was finished. That means crews were working around it — overhead, adjacent, on all sides — with zero margin for error. One dropped tool, one crane miscalculation, and you've damaged something that can't be repaired.

This is the kind of project where every trade — structural, mechanical, electrical, envelope — has to work as a unified system, not a stack of separate scopes. When it's done right, the visitor doesn't think about any of it. They just look up at a space shuttle and feel something.

That's what good architecture does. It makes the engineering disappear.

Completion date: April 13, 2026. Worth the trip to Exposition Park.