on the enterprise to show more parts of the ship, or even a proto holodeck that Roddenberry had mentioned in the making of star trek, that eventually ended up in the animated series?
on the enterprise to show more parts of the ship, or even a proto holodeck that Roddenberry had mentioned in the making of star trek, that eventually ended up in the animated series?
What was the armory a re-dress of? A portion of engineering?Honestly, they did such a good job redressing existing sets (the armory, environmental engineering, etc.) that I never felt that much was missing. Perhaps a cargo transporter or the bowling alley. I thought Star Trek Continues did well with the proto-holodeck.
Not much of a set...single red inner door with a red alert light on one side are the only clues. Two possible choices: 1. I think it was a "wild set" built behind the door between Kirk's Office/Quarter door and the corner going to Engineering. It would take up the same space as the "Brig". The door was reversed in opening direction than shown in the Journey to Babel set blueprint. 2. It could be a redress of McCoy's Lab with a red door vs. it's normal yellow door. I'm leaning on 1.What was the armory a re-dress of? A portion of engineering?
What was the armory a re-dress of? A portion of engineering?
Not much of a set...single red inner door with a red alert light on one side are the only clues. I think it was a "wild set" built behind the door between Kirk's Office/Quarter door and the corner going to Engineering. It would take up the same space as the "Brig". The door was reversed in opening direction than shown in the Journey to Babel set blueprint.
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A similar door entrance was seen as Ambassador Kollos' quarters in Is There In Truth No Beauty? at about the same period.
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I'm wondering if Roddenberry had any story ideas for a so called proto holodeck; was this ever even considered in any of the Phase II scripts?on the enterprise to show more parts of the ship, or even a proto holodeck that Roddenberry had mentioned in the making of star trek, that eventually ended up in the animated series?
The closest concept would be the simulated medieval reality in "Practice in Waking." But it used a kind of shared dreaming while characters were unconscious, instead of a holographic environment.I'm wondering if Roddenberry had any story ideas for a so called proto holodeck; was this ever even considered in any of the Phase II scripts?
It was also largely cobbled together from stock components that appeared in many other episodes and other shows shot on the Fox lot.This thread made me think of Lost in Space. In a LiS third season episode, they built a set to be a third (!?!) deck of the Jupiter 2 below the living quarters deck. Boy that Jupiter 2 was sooome spacecraft.
If I recall correctly, it was shown only in that one episode so my guess is it was a one shot set just for that one episode.
That doorway in terms of the alert light doesn't match the transporter, the sickbay lab, the briefing room, or even the doorway on Aux Control.Not much of a set...single red inner door with a red alert light on one side are the only clues. Two possible choices: 1. I think it was a "wild set" built behind the door between Kirk's Office/Quarter door and the corner going to Engineering. It would take up the same space as the "Brig". The door was reversed in opening direction than shown in the Journey to Babel set blueprint. 2. It could be a redress of McCoy's Lab with a red door vs. it's normal yellow door. I'm leaning on 1.
![]()
A similar door entrance was seen as Ambassador Kollos' quarters in Is There In Truth No Beauty? at about the same period.
![]()
I wonder if modern hairstyles would have started to show in later seasons kind of like the later years of "Happy Days." Uhura with a Afro, Spock with those big bushy sideburns. Chekov with longer hair. Kirk and Scotty with a early 70's mustaches. Sulu with a perm.
Sure. Scotty had his mustache by TMP, right?
Honestly, they did such a good job redressing existing sets (the armory, environmental engineering, etc.) that I never felt that much was missing. Perhaps a cargo transporter or the bowling alley. I thought Star Trek Continues did well with the proto-holodeck.
I'm wondering if Roddenberry had any story ideas for a so called proto holodeck; was this ever even considered in any of the Phase II scripts?
The closest concept would be the simulated medieval reality in "Practice in Waking." But it used a kind of shared dreaming while characters were unconscious, instead of a holographic environment.
Kor
This thread made me think of Lost in Space. In a LiS third season episode, they built a set to be a third (!?!) deck of the Jupiter 2 below the living quarters deck. Boy that Jupiter 2 was sooome spacecraft.
If I recall correctly, it was shown only in that one episode so my guess is it was a one shot set just for that one episode.
Robert
It was also largely cobbled together from stock components that appeared in many other episodes and other shows shot on the Fox lot.
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