Science | Atlantis Space Shuttle NASA Decides Homes for Retiring Space Shuttles Three museums get Atlantis, Discovery, and Endeavour By John Johnson Posted Apr 12, 2011 2:13 PM CDT Copied Space Shuttle Endeavour lands at the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Fla., in 2009. (AP Photo/Michael R. Brown, Florida Today) NASA's space shuttle fleet has only two flights left, and the space agency announced today where the shuttles are going for retirement, reports CollectSpace: Atlantis: It stays with NASA and will be parked at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida. Discovery: It's going to the Smithsonian's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center near Washington Dulles airport. Endeavour: It's going to the California Science Center in Los Angeles. Twenty-one institutions bid for the shuttles, and the New York Times notes that Museum of Flight in Seattle had already begun construction of a wing to house one of them. Also left out is NASA's Johnson Space Center in Texas. “This oversight smacks of a political gesture in an agency that has always served above politics," says local Rep. Pete Olson. Read These Next Bodies found at lifetime felon's former home. Looks like we have a date for the Taylor Swift-Travis Kelce nuptials. Gene Simmons says Congress has to fix the radio business model. FDA says faulty glucose monitors have caused deaths, injuries. Report an error