Star City, where astronauts live and train
This article is also available here in Spanish.

Star City, where astronauts live and train

My list

Author | M. Martínez Euklidiadas

The USSR space program that launched the first human, Yuri Gagarin, into space in 1961, would not have been possible without Star City. This urban-type support center also recruited the first group of female cosmonauts and sent Valentina Tereshkova into orbit in 1963. What happened to Star City? Where is it? Is it possible to visit it now?

History and origin of Star City

star city 06

Star City was the first training center designed specifically to send people into space. Built in 1960 next to a secret Air Force facility, for years this enclosed urban development was hidden by the forests surrounding Moscow.

As future cosmonauts and their families arrived, the city grew during the Cold War in the 1960s, during what became known as the Space Race (between the Soviet Union and the United States). Star City quickly became a state-of-the-art laboratory, a launching point for a technology unseen until then.

As the cosmonauts brought their families with them to the city, soon services such as schools, institutes, cinemas, theaters or sports centers were needed. What started as a town quickly grew into a small city connected to Moscow by rail and road.

In around 1990, its location was filtered and a slow reconversion process began, coinciding with the end of the Soviet Union. Star City opened up to NASA, even leading to the construction of low-rise American-style homes. On July 4, a public holiday in the United States, some of these houses are even decorated.

Where is Star City?

Star City, formally transliterated as Zvezdniy gorodok (Звёздный городок), is an urban area located in Moscow Oblast, approximately 40 kilometers from the capital. It is located near the towns of Leonikha and Chkalovsky and the Chkalovsky airport.

star city 02*Star City Flag | Георгий Долгопский*Isolated and almost entirely surrounded by forests, Star City consists of numerous important sites. The most famous of these is the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, inaugurated in 1960 in honor of the cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first human to be sent to space on April 12, 1961, just a year after the creation of the center.

Although there are still some public photographs of the area and various galleries available on the official website, the truth is it is impossible to access it with Google Maps or zoom in without pixelating the closed-off facility. The city still maintains part of the secrecy that characterized it at the end of the USSR.

Functions of the Star City

The Gagarin center is still in operation today, training future cosmonauts and, in fact, it also helps with the training of American astronauts and those from other countries. In the video below, the ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen, tells us what it is like to live in the city.

Star City is now under the control of ROSCOSMOS, Russia’s State Corporation for Space Activities, and it collaborates with NASA, ESA, CNSA or the JAXA, among other space agencies.

How do astronauts and cosmonauts train?

The scientist and engineer Sergei Pavlovich Korolev was the designer behind nearly all the cosmonaut training programs. Programs designed to evaluate cosmonauts’ physical and mental abilities that required a unique physical infrastructure. Within this infrastructure are numerous laboratories and testing centers.

Weightless environment training facility

star city 03

Also known as the hydro lab, the weightless environment training facility is a giant building characterized by a cylindrical water tank in its center. This tank is used to train astronauts in near neutral buoyancy conditions. It has been used since 1980 and all kinds of underwater tests are performed in it such as extravehicular activity training or module assembly.

Centrifuge or centrifugation simulators

star city 04

Centrifugation simulators are cylindrical facilities with a machine that simulates the acceleration astronauts are subjected to when they leave Earth. The CF-7 centrifuge was built in 1973 and it measures cosmonauts’ tolerance prior to acceleration. The TsF-18 centrifuge is shown below.

Space flight simulators

All Russian space missions have used some kind of equipment. For example, Soyuz crafts or rockets. For cosmonauts to get used to the environment and be able to operate in all types of conditions, they often have to train in these laboratories that simulate different scenarios. For example, the TDK-7ST3 simulator can create pre-launch conditions or the Soyuz-TMA, which simulates the ascent into space. In a way, these environments are like digital twins.

Flying laboratories

Although they are not formally in Star City, flying laboratories such as the IL-76 MDK are a critical part of the cosmonaut training program. The IL-76 served to simulate zero-gravity conditions.

Can you visit Star City?

star city 05

Although, to a large extent, Star City is still a secret, it can be visited, however, only with a special permit. This permit must be approved within a period of one month by the Russian authorities and it is processed through private companies that offer vacation packages to the city. These are in charge of compiling requests.

Virtual tours are available on the city’s official website. Visits to the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, a museum of space travel and human exploration, the Space Center and the Center’s Medical Infrastructure can be visited, and the pressure chambers.

Images | Neutral Buoyancy Trainer, Георгий Долгопский, PDXdj, Centrifuge, Pavel L Photo and Video/Shutterstock, fractalmonster/shutterstock

Recommended profiles for you

VS
Victor Sada
Arcus Infrastructure Partners LLP
Investment Executive
MB
Matteo Barbieri
GIGA PUBLISHING
DD
Dian Rizka Putri Dian Rizka
Itera
Student
DA
Dyllan Alvarado
student
Student
AA
Ahmed Abdelmaged
WSP
MS
Marcos Silva
MCS ARQUITETURA E ENGENHARIA
NW
Nouri Werdi
KONE
JS
Julia Saklakova
MIPU
International Business Development Manager
BW
Bill Wetzel
Cyclomedia Technology, Inc
BW
Benjamin Wyskida
SELF
NL
Nelson Laguna
TRISA
TI Manager
MP
Miquel Pigem
Advocat
Total
EV
Emiliano Raul Valeri Valeri
Grupo Randazzo
AK
Arash Khorram
Khorram Mercants
JD
Juan Ignacio dos Santos Villar
Intendencia Departamental de Rivera
Coordinador de Proyecto
BS
Budi Heru Santosa
BPPT
Senior researchef
MC
Marta Companys
Noord Zuid Architectuur
Architect. Independent project advisor and intermediary between Spain and the Netherlands.
TJ
Tim Jaudszims
TINY SPACE (Tiny Life UG)
EG
Ernst Gebetsroither
AIT Austrian Institution of Technology
Scientist at the Digital Resilient Cities Unit of the Center for Energy
JK
Jens Kammerer
ABB
Global Alliances

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

AM
Angel Meneses
TG SOLUCIONES
PM
Peter Madden
Cardiff University
Professor and Director
MD
Michael Docherty
EEAM Limited
Director
SD
Sourabh Das
DCPL
Consultant
MA
Monica Alcolea
Castiel Consultants
Project Manager
EL
Enric López Vila
Kinea Management
Director
EE
Elisabetta Errante
Ass. Cult. Apeiron
organization, creation and artistic direction of Events & Contemporary Mixed Media
JM
Jefte Samuel Mora Morales
Aketuri Architektai
BIM Lead Architect
NA
Nicolas Architector
Bim Academy
Smart City Manager
BW
Bill Wetzel
Cyclomedia Technology, Inc
NB
Nadine Bitar
Place Making ME
Executive Director /SME/Advisor /keynote Speaker /Thought Leader
HH
Hana Holoubkova
The Team Smart Solutions s.r.o
PP
Pablo Perlado
MON ARQUITECTOS SL
DN
Daria Nedumova
Midexpo
Deputy CEO
NW
Noreen Whysel
CUNY NYC College of Technology
PH
pyscilla hapsari
ipb
OM
Ognen Marina
Faculty of Architecture, UKIM in Skopje
Dean of Faculty of Architecture
SC
Steffen Chang
TwynstraGudde
TB
Trisha Bordoloi
Zunaak Design Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
Urban researcher and Architect
GP
Guillermo Pulido
ITESM
Architecture student