Power Tower – 1984

This is an artist’s conception of the proposed “Power Tower” space station configuration, shown with the Japanese Experiment Module attached. This model and several others were examined before deciding on the Space Station Freedom structure that was later abandoned in favor of the International Space Station.

Image credit: NASA
Image source: NASA on The Commons

Orbital Vehicle

Image credit: USAF
Image source: National Archives

6:10 INTO SPACE

Third release week of November 15, 1971 

THE 6:10 INTO SPACE. NASA is working on the design of a winged shuttle craft to resupply the manned space stations of the next decade. The giant space transports shown here can carry 50,000 pounds of men and cargo to the cluster of cylinders that make up a space base, the return to Earth and land like airplanes.

 Credit: North American Rockwell

Image credit: North American Rockwell
Image source: Numbers Station

NASA Earth Orbital Space Station

Image credit: McDonnell Douglas
Image source: Numbers Station

Orbital Workshop

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Mike Acs

Space Station

Image credit: North American Rockwell
Image source: Drew Granston

CSM/OW

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Mike Acs

Mysterious Alvarez

I’m pretty sure the top piece is by North American master illustrator M. Alvarez because he/she signed it. I think the bottom is by the same hand. What are we looking at? It’s a space station, but you knew that. You now know as much as I do. Parked here only because it shares the same page in Flying the Space Shuttles as the 1982 concept by Ted Brown I shared earlier.

Flying the Space Shuttles
Don Dwiggins
Dodd, Mead & Co., 1985

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Numbers Station