
The American Flag Salutes the Brave Men Who
Captured the U505 and from the German War Machine
© Oak Park Journal photo

A Last Look at the Sky for this Submarine, she
will soon be Sub-terrestrial.
© Oak Park Journal photo

History will be preserved by her move to a
controlled climate
display area.
© Oak Park Journal photo

A Solemn moment for all and thanks to the Armed
Services for
all their sacrifice.
© Oak Park Journal photo

Some of the fine young men who helped the war
effort greatly
by capturing the U505 and a secret Code Machine
(Enigma).
Names from L-R:
GM1 c Chester A. Mocarski,
Em2c William
R. Riendeau
CMM George W. Jacobson,
MOMMIcZenon B.
Lukosius
SM2c Gordon F. Hohne,
BM2cWayne M. Pickels
Jr
RM2c Stanley E.
Wdowiak, TM2c Arthur
W. Knispel
photo courtesy MSI archives

The Same Young men with a few more years and
their fine work
saved many lives on both sides of the war.
© Oak Park Journal photo

Mayor Daley signs the awards given to the men
from WWII.
© Oak Park Journal photo

Two Civilian women toast the moving of the
submarine to its new location.
© Oak Park Journal photo
The bottles are broken and the move starts.
© Oak Park Journal photo

Mayor Daley enjoys the view of all the hard work
done on the
job.
© Oak Park Journal photo

© Oak Park Journal photo

The Plan being held by these engineers shows how
the U505 is
set to be lowered into it climate controlled area
using hydraulic
lifters, that in this case will be lowering the sub in its new nest.
© Oak Park Journal photo

It was a beautiful morning and lots of Good News
for the future
of the U505
© Oak Park Journal photo
AFTER 50 YEARS, U-505 MAKES FINAL
VOYAGE
Public Invited to View Historic Submarine
Relocation by Museum
CHICAGO (April 5, 2004) - Parallel parking and three-point turns with
small
cars can be quite difficult for motorists in the city of Chicago, so
imagine
trying to do it with an approximately 700-ton, 252 foot sub.
That's exactly what the public will see the Museum of
Science and
Industry do with the historic U-505 submarine.
Beginning Thursday,
April 8, the Museum will move the U-505 from its
outdoor home into
an underground, climate-controlled, space to preserve the sub and
showcase
it in a dramatic new exhibit, scheduled to open
in 2005.
ABOUT THE
MOVE
The Museum will commence the U-505 move during a
ceremony on Thursday,
with special guests, including four WWII veterans that
assisted in the sub's capture in 1944, Commander Craig
Selbrede
of the U.S. Navy and the Great Lakes Naval Band. The
launch will
begin a two-to-three-week move process where
guests will be
able to
see the U-505 navigate tight turns and steer around
the Henry Crown
Space Center to the front of the Museum.
"Thousands of Chicagoans saw the U-505 make its
legendary trek across
Lake Shore Drive in 1954 and we want to make certain that the public
will
have the opportunity to see the U-505 make an equally historic
trip
to its new home," says Museum president and CEO David Mosena.
"Guests
will have the chance to see science and technology in
action and
be a part of an undeniably, once-in-a- lifetime experience."
Throughout the past several weeks, NORSAR Services
Inc., an engineered
transport and lifting company that specializes in moving massive
industrial
and marine objects, has worked to ensure a successful move. "Our crews
have mapped out every angle and square foot that this sub will maneuver
over the course of several weeks," says Ralph DiCaprio, vice president
of operations for NORSAR. "This is a sophisticated and delicate move
that
requires science, technology and
ingenuity."
For example, the team cut away concrete supports that have held the sub
in place for nearly 50 years, leveled all pathways that the
sub will travel so it will not have to scale curbs,
built towers
in the
below-ground exhibit hall that will be used to lower
the sub, as
well as
used hydraulic jacks to raise the sub 5 feet in
the air to
place it onto 18 dollies.
Over several days, the team will guide the U-505
approximately 1,000
feet
and lower it to its new home—a 75 x 300-foot, 42-foot deep underground
exhibit hall. Beginning Thursday, the boat will travel south
approximately
150-200 feet, where it will make a series of turns to position it south
of the
Henry Crown Space Center and perpendicular to Lake
Michigan. On
day two, the boat will then travel east and make another series of
turns
to face north, parallel to the entrance of the Space Center and Lake
Michigan.
The next move will be into the exhibit hall construction area where it
will come - to
rest, north of the Museum's east pavilion, for approximately
one week.
The sub will travel on 18 self-powered dollies
guided by remote control,
allowing the team to maneuver the sub given its confined quarters. The
dollies are a tried and proven system for moving large loads. Each dolly
can handle 50 tons and is equipped with a hydraulic jack. The hydraulic
jacks are interconnected to ensure the load is evenly distributed,
eliminating
the possibility of overloading any one point of the structure.
The U-505's four-story descent to its new exhibit
space is currently
planned for April 21-22, and will begin by
transferring the sub's
weight
to a skidding system consisting of eight skid beams,
each supplied
with
a 150-ton jack. Eight super shoring towers will be
installed inside
the underground exhibit hall to support bridges under the skid system
and
allow lowering of the sub. The sub will be skidded across the bridges
and
positioned in the center of the site.
The bridges spanning from the towers on each side
of the hall will
be
used as lifting beams to lower the sub into the site.
Then, beams
supporting the bridges will be removed and the sub
will be lowered
to the bottom of the hall with the rod lifting system.
Once the
sub is
at the bottom of the hall, the bridges will be removed
and the sub
will be jacked down to skid beams sitting in the skid track on the
hall's
floor.
The sub will be rotated to its final location above
the inner pit.
MOVE PREPARATION
In addition to work done around the perimeter of
the U-505, the team
has physically reinforced the sub to survive the move. "Submarines
built
in World War II had an average life expectancy of four to five years.
The
U-505 surpassed that time by nearly 60 years, even as it sat outside in
Chicago's extreme temperatures where it suffered from corrosion
and
rust. The Museum has taken great care of the sub
during that time
to ensure its survival," says Ed McDonald, director of exhibit projects
for
the Museum. "We've worked for the past two years to
make certain
that the U-505 would be structurally sound for this move."
Specifically, structural engineers used computer
models to simulate
the relocation, each time using different configurations of the cradles
that would support the boat during the move. The comprehensive analysis
concluded that it would take four cradles, plus special reinforcement,
to safely guide the U-505 to its new home.
ABOUT THE U-505 AND NEW EXHIBIT
US Naval Captain Daniel Gallery of the USS
Guadalcanal Task Force
22.3 and his crew captured the U-505 on June 4, 1944
off the West
coast
of Africa. The U-505 is the only foreign enemy
man-of-war boarded
and captured on the high seas by the United States Navy since 1815. It
is the only maritime vessel of its type on display in the United States
and will be the first to be moved indoors. The remaining four U-boats
in
the world are outdoors in Germany and England.
In 1997, Museum officials launched plans to restore
and relocate
the U-505. The $35 million project ' is the largest fund-raising
initiative
ever undertaken by the Museum for a single exhibit project. "The Museum
is fully committed to preserving and restoring this rare piece of
history
to ensure its survival," said Keith Gill, U-505 and transportation
curator.
"Future generations with little knowledge ofWWII will leam the powerful
story behind the U-505, as told by the men who where instrumental
in its capture."
The restored and relocated sub will be the
centerpiece of the new
U-505 experience, an exhibit that will immerse visitors in the dramatic
story of the search for and heroic capture of the U-505. Guests of the
new U-505 experience will not only be able to tour the inside of the
boat,
but have
the opportunity to see a sweeping view of it and see
the real torpedoes,
torpedo shafts and periscopes up close for the first time. The new
display
will accommodate more than 1 guests million annually.
Lohan Caprile Goettsch Architects of Chicago
designed the new underground
exhibit space. W.E. O'Neil Construction is the general contractor.
Jones
Lang LaSalle is the Museum's project manager
overseeing all aspects of the project.
ABOUT THE MUSEUM
The Museum is no stranger to extraordinary moves.
In 1954, crowds
gathered to watch crews slowly inch the U-505 from the shore of Lake
Michigan
across Lake Shore Drive to the Museum. In 1986, the
Museum carefully lowered the Apollo 8 through the
ceiling of the
Henry Crown Space Center. And in 1992, several exterior columns and a
wall
in the Museum's West Court were removed and a Boeing 727 was hauled in
piece-by-piece before being reassembled and cantilevered to the
Museum's
balcony. The restored 999 locomotive made its way in at the same time.
Five years later, in 1997, the Museum brought the Pioneer Zephyr train
indoors.
The Museum of Science and Industry's mission is to
inspire the inventive
genius in everyone by presenting captivating and compelling experiences
that are real and educational. Located at 57th Street and Lake Shore
Drive,
just minutes from downtown Chicago, the Museum is open every day of the
year except December 25.
Click
Here to go the Museum of Science and Industry Site for a lot of fun and
informative material on the U505l
More to come stay tuned......
|