A new exhibit at the Everhart Museum is preparing to launch.

SCRANTON, Pa. — It’s one small step for man, and a giant exhibit of NASA history being set up inside the Everhart Museum in scranton.

The months-long venture is one that CEO Tim Holmes and curator James Lansing are excited to unveil.

“We have folks from NASA who are here right now helping us to set this thing up. Uh, this has been stored here in Scranton for the past couple of weeks. We just got it all moved in here yesterday, and it is spectacular,” said Tim Holmes, Everhart Museum Chief Executive Officer.

Featuring the accomplishments of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration on a smaller scale.

It’s a collection that hasn’t orbited around Scranton since the 1970’s.

“So we’re excited about having this here during the springtime. That is when most of the schools in the region are coming to the Everhart and bringing their school buses here. So having all this educational stuff inside the Everhart at that time is just fantastic,” said Holmes.

Lansing has worked with the team on-site from NASA to help build the project that is on loan from the Smithsonian.

“To be able to bring it to Scranton for me is the most important thing, but to get a national exhibit, and again, to get it for free, which is very rare. I mean, these kind of exhibits cost hundreds of thousands of dollars just to rent for 4 or 6 months,” said James Lansing, Everhart Museum Curator.

From interactive displays to models depicting cosmic events literally out of this world, both men feel the exhibit will offer something for everyone who stops by.

“We’re trying to get more and more exhibits where people can actually touch and be involved in the exhibits because that seems to be something that was missing here in the past,” said Lansing.

“I mean, this just came from a place out in Nebraska, and it was in Arizona, like the places where this thing is shown is really, really big-time places. And they, they wanted to put Scranton on the list for this,” said Holmes.

The NASA exhibit at the Everhart Museum in Scranton will open to the public on January 14.

It will be on display through the spring.Â