According to Memory Alpha, David Carson and Nilo Rodis designed the
DRYDOCK - a structure larger in overall outer dimensions that Kirk's refit Enterprise, first seen in STAR TREK - THE MOTION PICTURE.
So, terminologically speaking, there probably exists a "Spacedock Earth", which is a vast organization centered on the mushroom station but having other docking facilities all around it - just like any harbor down here on today's Earth would have...
I don't really get the hatred for the ILM mushroom design. If anything, it's more true to the spirit of Star Trek than any of the contraptions of TMP. Probert tried to insert "realism" (as myopically squinted from the 1970s) where TOS had had absolutely none. His spindly structures looked like they were built for space, whereas all the technology of TOS was clearly more at home underwater or in some sort of fluid. The ILM Spacedock returned to those TOS roots by presenting a needlessly enclosed and streamlined structure, right down the Enterprise alley of truly futuristic, aesthetically pleasing, and functionally nonsensical space design.
You know that TOS got some tech advice they actually took, like the ship being put together in space.
We only saw one space station -- using a NASA space station model as a basis, I believe
You know that TOS got some tech advice they actually took, like the ship being put together in space.
And that's a very good example of how they ignored all the advice, so that not a bit of it ever made it to the episodes. Nothing in TOS indicates that the ship would have been put together in space, after all.
Not NASA as much as a proposal by Douglas. And that's another case of them not having any sort of understanding of what they were using, really. The whole point of the "sombrero" design of that station was that it could be packed inside the body of a conventional rocket, with each sombrero folding up like a fan, the pie-wedge sectors nesting inside each other. A Star Trek station wouldn't be launched by conventional rockets, and that sort of packaging would make no sense.You know that TOS got some tech advice they actually took, like the ship being put together in space.
^ Gonna be a loooongg time before spacewalks go away.
You know that TOS got some tech advice they actually took, like the ship being put together in space.
And that's a very good example of how they ignored all the advice, so that not a bit of it ever made it to the episodes. Nothing in TOS indicates that the ship would have been put together in space, after all.
When you put something like that in the bible, you don't need to put it in the ep;
Really, LiS and TOS have quite a bit in common in terms of artistic design. The latter show just has slightly more active retconners to invent functionality to the cool-looking gadgetry
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