Cape Canaveral and Titusville, long ghost towns after 1969 moon landing, have witnessed space industry ‘renaissance’

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lmost six decades have passed since the space coast of Florida experienced an atmosphere quite like this. On its beaches and in cities, there is an air of anticipation, excitement and anxiety to match the final days of Nasa’s storied Apollo moon program.

At 6.24pm ET on Wednesday at Cape Canaveral, subject to adverse weather and last-minute technical hitches, four Artemis II astronauts – three Americans and one Canadian – will become the first humans to blast off on a journey to the moon since 1972.

It will be a moment steeped in deep symbolism, given the rich history of America’s space port and its generations of Nasa engineers, rocket scientists and visionaries who paved the way for this new adventure to the stars. It will also be a solid step forward for the space agency’s newly announced ambition to build a permanent lunar base from which it plans future missions to Mars.