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The agreement calls for Boeing to use the hangar for 15 years, with an option to renew for another five. Then it will be up to Boeing to demolish the building, on NASA's get-rid-of list. Boeing is not paying NASA any rent, officials stressed, but rather will cover all operation costs and utilities. The hangar is 197 feet long, 1,650 feet wide and 95 feet high. It was last used to ready the shuttle Discovery for its final launch earlier this year. NASA wants to turn the space center -- long a government-only local -- into a multi-user spaceport. Other buildings are also up for grabs. Space Florida, a state agency, is working on more deals. Tourists, meanwhile, are about to gain entree into areas that were once strictly off limits. On Tuesday, the Vehicle Assembly Building -- where fuel tanks and booster rockets were attached to space shuttles
-- will open its doors to public bus tours for the first time since 1978. Throughout the ceremony, NASA officials and others stressed that Kennedy Space Center is not going out of business. "Ladies and gentlemen, the dream is alive," Nelson told the crowd. NASA relinquished its shuttle fleet to concentrate on new rockets and spacecraft that will be able to carry astronauts beyond low Earth orbit. An asteroid is the first stop. Mars is the prize. ___ Online: NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/
[Associated
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