Harman Patil (Editor)

Central Instrumentation Facility

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Nearest city
  
Titusville, Florida

NRHP Reference #
  
99001635

Opened
  
1965

Architectural style
  
International Style

Architect
  
Charles Luckman

Built
  
1965

Added to NRHP
  
January 21, 2000

Area
  
5,261 m²

Established
  
January 21, 2000

Central Instrumentation Facility httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Brevard County, Florida, USA

Visitation
  
not open to the public (n/a)

MPS
  
John F. Kennedy Space Center MPS

Similar
  
KSC Headquarters Building, Operations and Checkout, Crawlerway, Propulsion and Structural, Twenty‑Five Foot Space Simulator

The Central Instrumentation Facility (CIF) is the core of instrumentation and data processing operations at NASA's John F. Kennedy Space Center, Florida supporting KSC's space launch responsibilities. It centralizes the handling of the center's data including offices, laboratories and test stations; and houses general instrumentation activities serving more than one launch complex. The CIF also includes the Central Timing Facility, where a precision clock drives countdown clocks and other timing devices at KSC that require a high degree of accuracy.

Contents

The CIF also houses computers and other electronic equipment for reduction of telemetry data, analysis, and transmission to other NASA centers. The three-story structure of approximately 134,335 sq ft (12,480.1 m2) just west of the KSC Headquarters Building is one of the most distinctive buildings in the KSC Industrial Area with its rooftop array of various antennas.

The CIF and the Headquarters Building, which are almost 50 years old and showing signs of their age, are to be demolished during the next several years and replaced by a headquarters building that will consolidate all shared services and most administrative functions across the Industrial Area.

History

The CIF reflected the desire of Karl Sendler, KSC's first director of information systems, and his planners to centralize data handling. Although it was based on systems developed during Saturn I operations at Complexes 34 and 37, such experience was of limited value, because the distance from Launch Complex 39 to its Launch Control Center was more than 14 times as long. Planning and construction were coordinated with other NASA centers and with the Atlantic Missile Range. All metal in the building was grounded, and commercial power and the instrumentation power systems were grounded separately. Fluorescent lights, a source of electromagnetic interference, were not permitted. Its architect, Charles Luckman, also designed other nearby buildings.

The CIF was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places on January 21, 2000.

CIF antenna site

A smaller building, later known as the CIF antenna site, was placed 1.5 miles (2.5 km) north of the Industrial Area, to be free of radio-frequency interference and have clear line-of-sight to the NASA launch complexes.

References

Central Instrumentation Facility Wikipedia