PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Mission: Space
  • Mission: SPACE
rdfs:comment
  • Mission: Space (pl. Kosmiczna misja) to dwudziesty i ostatni odcinek pierwszego sezonu serialu Szczury laboratoryjne. Jego premiera odbyła się 5 listopada 2012 roku w USA i 20 marca 2013 roku w Polsce na kanale Disney XD.
  • The ride's origins can be traced back to the late 1970's, when a Space Pavilion with a similar motion simulator attraction was planned. It was cut from Phase One construction, alongside the Seas, Life and Health, Spain, Israel, and Equatorial Africa pavilions.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
foaf:homepage
Sezon
  • 1
Imię
  • Mission: Space
Poprzedni
  • Concert in a Can
Następny
  • Speed Trapped
odcinek
  • 20
dbkwik:disney/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:disneyparks/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:pl.disney/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Theme
  • Spacecraft cockpit
Name
  • Mission: SPACE
Type
  • Interactive centrifuge
Sponsor
  • Hewlett-Packard
Premiera USA
  • 2012-11-05
premiera PL
  • 2013-03-20
PL
  • Kosmiczna misja
Foto
  • EP20.png
Duration
  • 338.0
Music
  • "Destiny" by Cliff Masterson
Host
  • Gary Sinise
Land
guests per car
  • 4
cars per vehicle
  • 10
height requirement
  • 44
Opened
  • 2003-08-15
Vehicle Type
  • Four independent centrifuges
Park
Designer
Predecessor
reżyser
Scenarzysta
  • Chris Peterson i Bryan Moore
Kod produkcji
  • 120
abstract
  • Mission: Space (pl. Kosmiczna misja) to dwudziesty i ostatni odcinek pierwszego sezonu serialu Szczury laboratoryjne. Jego premiera odbyła się 5 listopada 2012 roku w USA i 20 marca 2013 roku w Polsce na kanale Disney XD.
  • The ride's origins can be traced back to the late 1970's, when a Space Pavilion with a similar motion simulator attraction was planned. It was cut from Phase One construction, alongside the Seas, Life and Health, Spain, Israel, and Equatorial Africa pavilions. The attraction opened to the public in a "soft opening" mode in June 2003, and celebrated its grand opening on October 9 with a ceremony attended by Disney CEO Michael Eisner, HP CEO Carly Fiorina and NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe, as well as several NASA astronauts from its many phases of human space exploration (Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, the space shuttle program and two crew members aboard the International Space Station). The attraction was built on the former site of Horizons, a dark ride that offered optimistic visions of what life might be like in the future. Horizons closed permanently in 1999 after a few years of sporadic operation; construction began on Mission: SPACE shortly thereafter. Industry estimates put the cost of developing the new attraction at US$100 million. Initially it was sponsored by Compaq, which began working with Disney Imagineers on the design in April 2000. Hewlett-Packard assumed the sponsorship upon its merger with Compaq in 2002. The simulator hardware used in Mission: SPACE was designed and built by Environmental Tectonics Corporation of Pennsylvania with a nearly $30 million contract awarded in February 2000. Environmental Tectonics sued Disney in 2003 seeking over $15 million US alleging failure to pay the full amount of the contract and sharing proprietary design details with competitors. Disney countersued alleging the company failed to deliver according to the contract and increased the cost of the ride by nearly $20 million US. The companies settled in January 2009.