Home World Knowledge Apollo astronaut’s granddaughter opens immersive ‘Lunar Light’ moonwalk experience in Dallas

Apollo astronaut’s granddaughter opens immersive ‘Lunar Light’ moonwalk experience in Dallas

by 9999biz.com
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What do you get when you mix an Apollo astronaut’s legacy with a trio of shipping containers, the latest in VR technology, the cousin of a “Star Wars” robot and an escape room like no other?

Well, if you are Danielle Roosa, the answer is clear: An immersive experience that can give anyone (10 years of age or older) the chance to explore the moon.

Launching on Leap Day (Feb. 29) in Dallas, Texas, “The Lunar Light: Discovery” is the creation of Roosa’s “Back to Space,” a transmedia organization that is working to inspire more interest in space, science and technology through mixed-reality installations. Part interactive theater and part virtual simulation, “The Lunar Light” is an hour-long adventure that challenges groups of visitors to become astronauts as they arrive on the moon following an asteroid strike in the year 2055.

Related: NASA astronaut walks on the ‘moon’ to get ready for Artemis landings (photos)

“‘Lunar Light’ is built by people who know hard science but who also love sci-fi,” said Roosa in an interview with collectSPACE.com. “So when you enter, it will be familiar because it is set in the near future, but we are also asking you to take a leap of imagination into a little bit of science fiction.”

As both an actor and the granddaughter of an Apollo astronaut, Roosa is perhaps uniquely positioned to blend space history with space odyssey. Her grandfather, Stu Roosa, orbited the moon on NASA’s Apollo 14 mission in 1971.

“I think that this has a direct connection to my grandfather,” said Roosa. “I followed in his footsteps by working at NASA and I loved that, but I always felt called by the entertainment industry. I think that by bridging my passions that I have created the perfect way to honor his memory.”

Danielle Roosa, founder of Back to Space and granddaughter of Apollo astronaut Stu Roosa, in front of “The Lunar Light: Discovery” installation as opening in Dallas on Feb. 29, 2024. (Image credit: Back to Space)

Three canisters and a bot



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