I doubt they cared one jot about Kirk's viewpoint of the door - people come and go on the Bridge all the time and the captain's attention should be focused on the instruments or on the task at hand. Also, Matt Jefferies came from an aviation background and wouldn't have found putting the main access into the control centre being behind the the pilots all that unusual IMO.
What television set designers and especially directors DO care about is how shots are arranged to appear on screen. The offset doors make all this much easier.
Meh. The corridor is generic and used for all corridors. This isn't a real ship of course, so the sets are practical for shooting the show, not some accurate guideline for the fictional ship's actual layout. Most sets don't accurately fit into the building exteriors shown (I first noticed this in All In the Family a zillion years ago) after all.
You could say the same about all the sets, though.
Even the infamous off-centre Bridge was likely only that way because it made for easier framing! In all likelihood a "real" Enterprise Bridge would have the single entrance at the rear of the room, just like an aircraft cockpit (and having the extra benefit of allowing the captain easy visual access to all the stations). Yet in every recreation, cutaway and blueprint the Bridge appears in the classic offset position. Sometimes, things on screen are just as they appear after all, despite all logic to the contrary.
But if you squint hard enough, everything fits - in which case, why worry at all?![]()
The set designers didn't think the entry should be right behind the captain's back, because that's a very irritating arrangement for the boss. And I can tell you first hand, it is troublesome to work in an office whose entrance is right behind your back.
In my head canon, the TOS Enterprise is scaled up enough so the captain and navigator face forward, and the elevator is offset 36 degrees. The exterior Bridge housing just has to be a bit bigger, and the external cylinder at the aft end of the Bridge housing becomes something other than the elevator housing.
The wall facing consoles are excellent if the intent was for crewmen to focus on their individual stations without distraction. A full body pivot isn't necessary to speak to the captain in real life, so long as he was listening to your report. However, this makes for pretty boring television....Which is a pretty odd setup to begin with, as nobody can see the Captain without ceasing work and pivoting!
As do I!Well, one of my ambitions is to create duplicates of a number of fiction movie and television settings. So figuring out their layout is desirable. Thus I worry about such details
This certainly solves the issue with the offset doors, but is there a practical reason for such a design? A simple continuation of this would be to have a vertical exit for the turbolift which goes down and then reconnects to the main shaft. Such a setup would also allow an easy replenishment of turbolift cars which is exactly what we see on many episodes (the unusual circumstances of The Naked Time being the natural exception)The turbo lifts can travel horizontally as well as vertically. So In my head canon the external cylinder at the aft end of the bridge housing is the vertical shaft for the turbolift, which then travels sideways a short distance to the turbolift door.
Whenever the bridge was redesigned in the TOS movies the horizontal path of the turbolift was shortened or lengthened so the door would be in the right position.
A simple security foyer would alleviate all these situations! I know, not good television...That's what I figured too. If someone came out of the turbolift waving a gun, Kirk's got at least peripheral vision and a sporting chance.
In-universe, I kind of like the idea that the turbolift alcove was at an angle so that it was more difficult for a hostile to simply exit the turbolift and shoot the captain in the back of the head.
They came close with The Brady Bunch house recently on HGTV, but still not a 100% fit.Or see the interior sets and exterior of the Addams Family (1964-66) mansion, or Collingwood in Dark Shadows (1966-1972) etc. etc. In some contemporary shows there are still problems fitting the interior sets inside the exteriors.
Me three.As do I!I still intend to complete my set-accurate deckplans one of these days. Perhaps 2020 shall be the year...
In any case, it's clear that many other fans hold our viewpoint at differing levels of importance, so its only fair to acknowledge that.
The turbo lifts can travel horizontally as well as vertically. So In my head canon the external cylinder at the aft end of the bridge housing is the vertical shaft for the turbolift, which then travels sideways a short distance to the turbolift door.
Whenever the bridge was redesigned in the TOS movies the horizontal path of the turbolift was shortened or lengthened so the door would be in the right position.
...This certainly solves the issue with the offset doors, but is there a practical reason for such a design? A simple continuation of this would be to have a vertical exit for the turbolift which goes down and then reconnects to the main shaft. Such a setup would also allow an easy replenishment of turbolift cars which is exactly what we see on many episodes (the unusual circumstances of The Naked Time being the natural exception)...
...![]()
True, but that's a lot of wasted horizontal space nonetheless.A practical reason for the sideways branch to the door would be if that branch continued beyond the door and there were one or more turbolift cars waiting in that space. And there could be a symmetrical horizontal branch on the other side of the vertical shaft with more waiting cars for the convenience of the persons on the bridge.
Indeed!I believe that the bridge designs of the Enterprise and the Enterprise A differ a lot between the various TOS movies. Phil Farrand in The Nitpicker's Guide for Classic Trekkers (1994) mentioned that the location of the door(s) for the turbolift changed in various movies, and thought that it would be a lot of work to move the shaft around between movies.
Nobody's peripheral vision goes back anywhere near that far.That's what I figured too. If someone came out of the turbolift waving a gun, Kirk's got at least peripheral vision and a sporting chance.
Fixed that for you. Only 5 & 6.[...]but the Ent-A had them different in films4,5 & 6[...[
The fact that there is ever a delay for multiple turbolift cars (Naked Time, Alternative Factor, Battlefield) would also be evidence against "spare" turbolift cars stacked horizontally, ready to deploy.
Inertial dampeners regularly keep the crew from turning into paste, so why not in the turbolifts?But that's crazy. The passenger would be killed by acceleration trauma (or by slamming into the roof of the car) if it shot down the shaft that fast.
Wasted space, you say?True, but that's a lot of wasted horizontal space nonetheless.
Since all the other Starships looked the same, I doubt Kirk had any input in the design of the bridge shape or size; he took what he got and glad of it.Yet Kirk favors this cut-off minimum facility for some reason. Perhaps his lean-and-mean approach forces the fancy aft pimple to protrude when a more sensible bridge choice would have that feature smoothly contained and not bothering the audience.
Incorrectly fixed!Fixed that for you. Only 5 & 6.
Ah, I misapprehended your point. Sorry.Incorrectly fixed!
My point was that the turbolift doors in 4, 5 & 6 all had different placements to each other in those films, disregarding what had come before
The passenger would be killed by acceleration trauma (or by slamming into the roof of the car) if it shot down the shaft that fast.
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