I don’t have live tool access in this turn, but here’s the latest I can share based on recent public reporting up to early 2025 and common knowledge.
- The Space Shuttle program ended in 2011 with Atlantis’ final flight, and the orbiters have since been preserved in museums or repurposed for education and display.[2][7]
- There has been ongoing interest in the orbiters’ legacy and their status in museums, including Atlantis at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex and Discovery at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, with periodic discussions about moving or exhibiting orbiters in other venues.[7][2]
- In the broader context of NASA’s human spaceflight program, “Space Shuttle” terminology today is primarily historical, used for legacy references and educational materials rather than an active operational vehicle; current programs focus on Artemis and commercial crew vehicles.[7]
Illustration: If you’re looking for a current visualization of where each orbiter is now (Atlantis at Kennedy Space Center, Discovery at NASM, Endeavour at California Science Center, Atlantis being the one accessible to the public), I can generate a simple map or chart.
Would you like a concise, up-to-date summary with sources, or a quick visualization showing the disposition of each orbiter and their museum locations? If you want the most current headlines, I can also perform a fresh web search and pull the latest exact articles.