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Set blueprint exchange

Some research into the TNG set dressing - I've gone through the screenshots and identified each button panels used on the permanent sets. All the long panels are confirmed to be all the same design and numbers. Unfortunately this particular design had poor silk-screening leading to essentially black blobs for text. Completely new versions with much clearer text were created for DS9 onwards rather than reuse the TNG versions.

I've managed to figure out each of the text by utilising multiple filters and then overlaying the font. In the picture below, orange = certain, and green = open to interpretation.
d11a3802ae6b69da43d45ed7a44a25d711e011f8.png


There was one long panel that was a different design visible in one of the Transporter Panoramas. It was on a panel blocking off the access corridor - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#16397440510934/16397441615016
However I can confirm that the panel was not present during TNG, and instead added for the panorama. It was possibly added to hide the access corridor end as it goes nowhere. In 7x10 we can see the corridor is still open as before (https://tng.trekcore.com/hd/albums/season-7/7x10/inheritance-hd-214.jpg)

Dimensions for the button panels in the Galaxy project plans have all been redone from scratch and now include long panels, short panel, doorbell (or slim panel) and the three row panel (used on observation lounge table etc.)

Currently the Galaxy Project sits at 155 pages - double the last release. Still got a long way to go before release though - hoping for possible a late June release.
 
Type 7 shuttlecraft
http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15444658681181/16447859824560
Source: http://www.trekplace.com/ap2005int01.html

Padd variant
http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15444710554224/16447861128605
Source: unknown - found it on my hard drive (it was probably the Propworx auction site)

Tiny image of Battle Bridge cross section
http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15444734874999/16447868322936
Source: https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/star-trek-next-gen-battle-bridge-original


Robert Bonchune worked on the cgi on DS9, Voyager and Enterprise. He's been repairing/retexturing the original cg assets and rendering them. As well as beauty shot renders, there are also orthographic shots - very useful for modelling. If you put your mouse over the orthographic image, icons for seeing it full size will appear.
Artstation Gallery: https://www.artstation.com/sleekndone
One of my favourites is the Orbital Inspection Pod: https://www.artstation.com/artwork/xJKA21

I learned about this gallery from @Rekkert twitter post - https://twitter.com/TadeoTrek/status/1488588801261850630
 
That’s a great internet find!
That type 7 would be a pain to build.

They never could build a full size mock-up properly, it was too difficult. That's why it went away and was replaced with the type 15 and eventually type 6.

(And this was the simplified version! The original design was even curvier)
 
Probert initially wanted something like this:

KVMrZgY.png


Then went to a boxier straight line shuttle to be easier (a version of which made it into one of the early series matte paintings):

qR12e3b.jpg


Then that was simplified to mostly the shuttle we know with simpler side doors:

oJiJbPL.jpg


The windows were then simplified for the actual filming model:

Ta2Ad0N.png


But they had real trouble building a scale model for use with actors, and couldn't really recreate it properly (and what they did recreate was only one side and apparently very fragile:

n3aFhuD.jpg


So they created the box little type-15 shuttlepod which would be much easier to build a scale model of, and then after Star Trek 5 they inherited the Galileo shuttlecraft scale model and modified it into the TNG type-6 shuttle.
 
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Much like the Phase 2 shuttle, it was ahead of its time.
Nowadays, they could just let the shape be 3D printed on industrial machines and take a cast for fiberglass structure.
 
Nowadays they'd just build the entrance hatch for the actors to interact with and CG in the rest, probably, with the interior on a separate set.
 
@Bellerophon: Having studied the Type 7 extensively, that's not entirely accurate. Probert designed the shuttle with both the front door and the side doors in place. The front one went to the cockpit, the side ones to the passenger/cargo area (the concept even makes the distinction between cargo and entry doors, as you can see below).
This is noticeable on both the concept piece and the matte painting you posted. The two different access points were part of the design until the interior set for the shuttle was built. Then it was the side doors which were removed, not the front one. The final filming miniature follows the concept pieces regarding the front end, and the ramp was even there on the interior. Of course it was never seen in use due to how prohibitively expensive it would've been, but it is there. In contrast the panels for the side doors were completely replaced by another pattern on the filming model, not to mention we clearly see the interior there and there's no door or hatch border visible.
shuttle7-probert-door.jpg

the-best-of-both-worlds-part-two-hd-258.jpg

Also, there was an original filming miniature (only used in season 1's 'Coming of Age') which did have both the side doors and the longer windows, not to mention a totally different paint scheme much more similar to Probert's design. It was later replaced for season 2 with the more familiar model, without the side doors.
Type-7-shuttle-model-1.jpg

shuttle7-model-copernicus.jpg


It's also worth pointing out that the photo of the filming model you posted isn't how it actually looked like, as the model had the ship's registry at the front, between the two windows every time it was shown as an Enterprise shuttle.
For its final appearance on 'The Chase', the model was used as a civilian craft, so they used black tape to hide all the Enterprise markings. Eventually when the model was taken out of storage and on tour (that picture you posted was taken at an exhibition), someone removed the side tape that was blocking the large '1701-D' markings, but accidentally left both the large rectangular one at the front that was covering the registry number and the smaller bit of tape at the sides covering the shuttle's name in between the red Starfleet stripes.
Here you can see two screencaps of how it looked in 'The Host', as being an Enterprise shuttle; and on 'The Chase' as a civilian one. Notice not only the black rectangle added at the front, but also the one covering the '1701-D' which makes it look like the ship has a larger window at the back.
the-host-hd-114.jpg

the-chase-hd-191.jpg
 
Probert initially wanted something like this:

KVMrZgY.png


Then went to a boxier straight line shuttle to be easier (a version of which made it into one of the early series matte paintings):

qR12e3b.jpg


Then that was simplified to mostly the shuttle we know with simpler side doors:

oJiJbPL.jpg


The windows were then simplified for the actual filming model:

Ta2Ad0N.png


But they had real trouble building a scale model for use with actors, and couldn't really recreate it properly (and what they did recreate was only one side and apparently very fragile:

n3aFhuD.jpg


So they created the box little type-15 shuttlepod which would be much easier to build a scale model of, and then after Star Trek 5 they inherited the Galileo shuttlecraft scale model and modified it into the TNG type-6 shuttle.
Ironically there is a section in a real space book called “”whittling down the space shuttle” that showed how a lovely TSTO concept became the TSTO equipped, skid/drop-tank glider thingy we got instead.
 
Recently came across a Facebook group for Star Trek Concept art, and there were a few blueprints scattered within.
The source for all these images in this post is "Star Trek Concept Art, Graphics, and Design (Pro)" - https://www.facebook.com/groups/154006338646486

Discovery
Shuttlebay (orb configuration) 01 - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465688048631
Shuttlebay (orb configuration) 02 - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465688049814

Shenzhou Bridge - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465702281688

TNG - Nemesis
Scorpion Shuttle A - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15444658681181/16465691125095
Scorpion Shuttle B - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15444658681181/16465691126140
Scorpion Shuttle C - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15444658681181/16465691127520

NX Enterprise
Engineering A - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15415263192749/16465694401713
Engineering B - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15415263192749/16465694404616
Engineering C - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15415263192749/16465694402780

TMP
Unknown Dome A - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413366736084/16465700250644
Unknown Dome B - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413366736084/16465700251760

Orbital Office top view - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15415366461389/16465712320517

Star Trek beyond
Thruster - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15415159694679/16465698069410

Phase II
Admiral Office - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413596415852/16465709711963

Strange New Worlds
Bridge A - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#16465718866058/16465719069137
Bridge B - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#16465718866058/16465719067062
Bridge Concept - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#16465718866058/16465719069659

Voyager
Ares - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15444658681181/16465737878838

Ship References - Orthographic renders of the ship
Section 31 ship - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465706652726
Section 31 other ship - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465706646698
Section 31 ship lengths A - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465706647869
Section 31 ship lengths B - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465706648914
Section 31 ship lengths C - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465706653705
Section 31 ship lengths D - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465706655250

USS Clark - http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15413578784399/16465708361308
 
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My copy is in storage so I can't be 100% sure, but I think Lora Johnson used that drawing in Mr. Scott's Guide as part of her illustration of the egress hatches on the dorsal surface of the saucer (like when Kirk & co. exit the ship to walk to V'Ger). I think the dome is meant to be a formation light.
 
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