Federal News
NASA Solicits Bids to Relocate Shuttle Discovery to Houston
March 21, 2026
NASA has issued a Draft Request for Proposal (DRFP) for a Multiple Award Indefinite Delivery Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) contract focused on the multimodal transportation of flown space vehicles and aerospace artifacts, including the Space Shuttle Discovery. This initiative aims to establish a long-term enterprise capability for complex transportation operations of large aerospace vehicles. The agency is specifically seeking industry feedback on relocating the Space Shuttle Discovery from the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., to Space Center Houston near the Johnson Space Center, Texas. Stakeholders must submit comments by April 9, 2026. The contract is expected to be awarded in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2026, with an estimated budget allocation of $85 million for the shuttle relocation effort.
- Why this matters: This procurement represents a significant opportunity for contractors specializing in complex, large-scale transportation and aerospace artifact handling, emphasizing preservation and safety.
- The solicitation reflects NASA's intent to develop a sustainable transportation capability for flown aerospace vehicles, potentially leading to multiple awards under the IDIQ vehicle.
- Procurement professionals should note the April 9, 2026 deadline for feedback submissions and prepare for the formal solicitation release expected later in 2026.
- Companies with expertise in engineering services (NAICS 541330) and aerospace logistics should evaluate participation strategies to support NASA's multimodal transportation requirements.
NASA anticipates that this contract vehicle could support both current and future transportation requirements involving flown aerospace vehicles, spacecraft hardware, and historically significant artifacts.
— Jason Phillips, Contracting Officer
It’s cutting-edge technology. Without it, the shuttle program wouldn’t happen, right? It wouldn’t be successful. So, it’s an absolutely critical component.
— Olga Bannova, Professor at University of Houston
My law authorizing and funding the Space Shuttle Discovery's movement to Houston is being set into motion thanks to NASA's announcement, and I applaud [NASA] Administrator [Jared] Isaacman for keeping this process moving.
— Senator John Cornyn
Agencies
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, Johnson Space Center, United States Senate
Contracts
, $85 million allocated
Locations
Sources
- NASA Asks For Shuttle Relocation Ideas - NASA Watch · NASA Watch · Mar 20
- NASA begins contracting process to potentially relocate Space Shuttle Discovery to Houston – Houston Public Media · Houston Public Media · Mar 20
- Cornyn Praises NASA Soliciting Bids to Move Shuttle Discovery to Houston | Senator Cornyn · Cornyn Senate · Mar 21