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Starfleet Academy Starship Thread

Genesis runs from the Airlock to the second floor of the Atrium within minutes, so internal context clues are that they're nearby.

Also that Darem walks using grav boots from the same airlock to the top of the saucer - near the arrowhead window over the top of the atrium, which is unlikely in eight minutes, given that the ship is apparently the size it appears to be.

The atrium decks appear to stretch out to the left and right of the stairs more than the neck would allow.

Also in the shot youve posted, if the Atrium window was at the bottom of the neck, then surely we would be able to see more of the ground compound than just some flags?
 
The giant window is on the saucer section between the delta and the name and registration decal. It can be seen in this forward facing view of the ship.
That's the bridge window, not the atrium.

as Jack pointed out, you can literally see the Atrium through the big neck window
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It's an inconsistency.
 
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As a possible compromise, we know we have Sato Atrium in Episode 1, but there was an interview (Trek Culture, I think), that said the Betazoid Conference was held in Uhura Atrium, so possibly Sato Atrium in the saucer and Uhura Atrium in the neck?
 
Given we can see the "roof" of the atrium in the central saucer in Episode 1, how can that be the atrium viewport?
It's the 32nd century and they've been messing with internal spatial dimensions since at least the 31st century.

Which means there's literally no point in trying to map internal spatial dimensions any longer.
 
I've been watching the series on my small laptop as have had trouble getting my TV hooked up. Now looking at the stills and screenshots on this thread, reminds me how easy it is to forget how friggin beautiful the visuals have been on a lot of new Trek. We take so much for granted but it gives an appreciation why the series do spend so long in post-.

Separately, the distance shots of the ship parked at the campus remind me a lot of how living on islands trains you to be conscious of our weekly supply ships; in Bermuda I could walk up the road and see if the Oleander had got in on time; in Alderney in the Channel Islands I could see our ship Trinity from my kitchen window and gauge what time to head to the shops to get something that had sold out. Strong emotions on that one.
 
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