The Space Shuttle Endeavour flies on the back of a 747 over Treasure Island in San Francisco en route to Los Angeles International Airport yesterday
The US space shuttle Endeavour took its last ever flight yesterday, planning a spectacular series of flypasts before finally heading into retirement near where it was built in California.
Riding piggyback on a specially fitted Boeing 747, the shuttle took off from Edwards Air Force base north of Los Angeles, the last leg after a two-day trip across the country from Cape Canaveral, Florida.
Before reaching the West Coast, the shuttle notably flew over Tucson, Arizona to honour former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, who survived a horrific shooting last year and whose husband—retired astronaut Mark Kelly—commanded Endeavour’s final mission.
“It was pretty spectacular ... The people of Tucson got an incredible view of this remarkable machine,” Kelly told CNN, adding: “It’s really a testament to American ingenuity.”
The shuttle was to fly over landmarks including San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge, Disneyland and the Hollywood sign, before landing at Los Angeles International Airport, or LAX. Police have warned Angelenos to take care while watching the shuttle’s final flight.
“Obviously we want people to take in this majestic show as these aircraft make sweeping low-level passes over Southern California’s iconic spots,” said LA Police Department (LAPD) commander Scott Kroeber.
“But if you’re driving, please drive and don’t try and take in the show simultaneously. We don’t want this to be the mother of all distracted driver incidents.” The shuttle will spend a few weeks at a United Airlines hangar at LAX, before being transferred to the California Space Centre, where it will go on display on October 30.
Endeavour, which flew more than 185mn kilometres  in its two-decade career, completed its final mission last year.
After the space agency Nasa brought an end to the 30-year shuttle programme last year, major US cities battled for the right to house one of the craft.
Enterprise, the prototype that never flew into space, is now on permanent display on the runway of the Intrepid aircraft carrier in New York.
The Kennedy Space Centre will keep Atlantis, and Discovery is on display at a museum outside Washington.
Two other shuttles were destroyed in flight. Challenger disintegrated shortly after liftoff in 1986 and Columbia broke apart on re-entry to Earth in 2003. Both disasters killed everyone on board. AFP