On Dec. 6, 1998, the crew of space shuttle mission STS-88 began
construction of the International Space Station, attaching the
U.S.-built Unity node and the Russian-built Zarya module together in
orbit. The crew carried a large-format IMAX® camera, used to take this
image of Unity lifted out of Endeavour's payload bay to position it
upright for connection to Zarya.
Zarya, launched on Nov. 20, 1998, was the first piece of the
International Space Station. Also known as the Functional Cargo Block
(FGB), it would provide a nucleus of orientation control, communications
and electrical power while the station waited for its other elements.
Two weeks later, on Dec. 4, 1998, NASA's space shuttle Endeavour
launched Unity, the first U.S. piece of the complex, during the STS-88
mission.
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