List of Fictional Spacecraft - Space Stations

Space Stations

  • Toy Box - Planetes
  • Watchtower - Justice League (TV series)
  • Babylon 4 – 'missing', presumed destroyed, diplomatic space station – Babylon 5
  • Babylon 5 – diplomatic space station – Babylon 5
  • Death Star - Star Wars
  • Deep Space Nine - originally Terok Nor, orbital ore processing station, later moved out of orbit and refitted as a multipurpose space station - Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
  • Space City - Blake's 7.
  • XK-72 - Blake's 7.
  • Midway Station - Small space station located between the Milky Way Galaxy and Pegasus Galaxy with 2 Stargates - Stargate Atlantis
  • Satellite 5 - large manned broadcasting base in Doctor Who
  • Thunderbird 5 - Thunderbirds
  • Armstrong Space Station - U.S military space station from Dale Brown novels, also known as the Silver Tower due to its silver, anti-laser construction. - Silver Tower
  • Deep Space Nine, also known as Terok Nor - Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
  • ISPV 7 space station - Planetes
  • Oberon - Planet of the Apes (2001 film)
  • Omega - A mined out asteroid and safe haven for criminals. Mass Effect 2
  • R.U. Sirius - Brewster Rockit: Space Guy!
  • Russian orbital satellite laser system - EndWar and H.A.W.X 2
  • SLAMS - EndWar and H.A.W.X
  • Space Station V - rotating wheel space station - 2001: A Space Odyssey
  • The Cairo, Malta and Athens, "Magnetic Acceleration Cannon"-stations (aka MAC-stations), a part of a larger geosync orbital defence cluster built to protect Earth. Halo 2
  • The American Freedom Star in EndWar
  • The Citadel (Mass Effect)
  • The Halo Arrays (Halo)
  • Vanguard Station - Star Trek Vanguard
  • World's Fair - Earth Star Voyager

Read more about this topic:  List Of Fictional Spacecraft

Famous quotes containing the words space and/or stations:

    Time in his little cinema of the heart
    Giving a première to Hate and Pain;
    And Space urbanely keeping us apart.
    Philip Larkin (1922–1986)

    The only road to the highest stations in this country is that of the law.
    William Jones (1746–1794)