Alternatives to deorbiting the International Space Station, 9 August | Event in Spring | AllEvents

Alternatives to deorbiting the International Space Station

NSS North Houston Space Society

Highlights

Sat, 09 Aug, 2025 at 02:00 pm

Barbara Bush Branch Library

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Date & Location

Sat, 09 Aug, 2025 at 02:00 pm (CDT)

Barbara Bush Branch Library

6823 Cypresswood Dr, Spring, TX 77379-7705, United States

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About the event

Alternatives to deorbiting the International Space Station
Join us for our Monthly NSS North Houston Space Society ( http://NorthHoustonSpace.org) meeting.

This will be a hybrid meeting. Come in person at Barbara Bush Library (6817 Cypresswood Drive, Spring, TX 77379) or join us online using Zoom (see details on our website https://www.northhoustonspace.org/)

The meeting will be on Saturday, August 9, 2025 at 2PM (US Central Time).

2:00 PM – Opening Remarks
2:10 PM – Space News – Greg Stanley
2:40 PM – Alternatives to Deorbiting the International Space Station (ISS) – David Cheuvront
4:00 PM – End of Meeting at the Library
(as soon as we can get there)
Informal get together at PJ’s Coffee near the library

About our Featured Speaker: David Cheuvront

David Cheuvront is a pilot, mechanical engineer, and former NASA professional with nearly 50 years of experience in aviation, space, and technology. After getting his private pilot
license in 1976, David began his engineering career as co-op Aerospace Engineer Student Trainee at a US Navy aircraft overhaul and modification center. He transitioned from aviation into space at Rockwell International after the Challenger accident (1986) as a Maintainability Engineer responsible for developing concepts for maintaining the Space Station. He was Lead for Maintainability for the Electrical Power System for Space Station at Rocketdyne. At
McDonnell Douglas, David was Lead for Reliability and Maintainability for Work Package 2 (JSC) and Maintenance Integration across all “Work Packages” (other NASA Centers) for
Space Station when it was named “Freedom.”
After joining NASA’s ISS Program Office in 1994, he lead projects such as ISS Vehicle Effectiveness, Electromagnetic Compatibility, and Test & Verification. After the Columbia accident and completing Certification for the ISS Japanese Experiment Module, David transferred to the JSC Engineering Directorate’s Advanced Development Office as Technology Integration Manager. He served as Systems and Disciplines Lead for Next Generation Launch Technology Program, Cost-Engineering Lead for Shuttle-Derived Launch Vehicles, and Lead for the Pre-Constellation Lunar Lander Development Planning Team. With the start of the Constellation Program, he became Environments Lead and later, Assistant to the Chief of Staff/Technical for Systems Engineering and Integration. He was also a Safety and Mission Assurance lead for the Orion Crew Vehicle, propellant depot, and other innovative technology initiatives.
After retiring from NASA in 2013, David was a member of the NASA-funded “Evolvable Lunar Architecture” study (2015) team. He developed the strategy for integrated risk management
which was a key driver for the overall concept. He later was the Co-Investigator for a subsequent NASA Ames Economic Research for Space Development study, “Multi-Commodity Public-Private Partnerships for Lunar Resource Utilization.” He is an active
member of the NSS Policy Committee and Policy Leadership Team and is developing concepts for a Space Settlement analog site in New Hampshire.

About the Meeting
Meetings are open to all age groups and interest levels. Come explore with us the potential that developing and exploring space has to better life here on earth and to open up new frontiers creating new perspectives that can help enrich the human experience.

The Vision of NSS is people living and working in thriving communities beyond the Earth, and the use of the vast resources of space for the dramatic betterment of humanity.

The Mission of NSS is to promote social, economic, technological, and political change in order to expand civilization beyond Earth, to settle space and to use the resulting resources to build a hopeful and prosperous future for humanity. Accordingly, we support steps toward this goal, including human spaceflight, commercial space development, space exploration, space applications, space resource utilization, robotic precursors, defense against asteroids, relevant science, and space settlement oriented education.

Website: http://NorthHoustonSpace.org
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NssNorthHoustonSpaceSociety/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/nss-north-houston-space-society/
Barbara Bush Library: https://hcpl.bibliocommons.com/v2/events?series=6765e65bfea9b97171fc2ac1


Also check out other Meetups in Spring, Performances in Spring, Arts events in Spring.

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Barbara Bush Branch Library, 6823 Cypresswood Dr, Spring, TX 77379-7705, United States
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NSS North Houston Space Society

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Alternatives to deorbiting the International Space Station, 9 August | Event in Spring | AllEvents
Alternatives to deorbiting the International Space Station
Sat, 09 Aug, 2025 at 02:00 pm