Kitt Peak National Observatory, west of Tucson, reopened to the public Friday after being closed for more than three years due to COID and a damaging wildfire.

After being closed to the public for more than three years β€” first due to COVID and later because of damage from a wildfire β€” Kitt Peak National Observatory reopened to visitors Friday.

β€œAfter a long wait, we’re thrilled to announce that Kitt Peak National Observatory is reopening its doors and domes,” observatory officials said Friday in a post to their official Facebook page.

Visitors can book guided tours and β€œselect nighttime observing program” for Fridays through Sundays, the observatory said.

Tucson space photographer, Dean Salman takes amazing photos of the universe from Kitt Peak Observatory and around Arizona. Take a look at some of his work from beyond our Solar System

Due to limited parking, the observatory will only be available to visitors through β€œadvance tour reservations,” they said. Sixty slots will be available each of the three days. Visitors can expect more days open in October, they said.

The observatory was already closed to the public due to COVID protocols when the Contreras Fire ripped through the area in June 2022.

The wildfire, which was sparked by lightning in the Baboquivari Mountain range, burned nearly 30,000 acres and took over 350 personnel to contain.

While the telescopes themselves remained unharmed, observatory officials said the site sustained heat, smoke and secondary effects as four non-scientific buildings were destroyed.

In March, the Arizona Department of Transportation began replacing guardrails on an 8-mile stretch of Arizona 386, the highway leading up to the observatory, after they were burned by the fire.

In the observatory’s more than 60 years atop Kitt Peak, no fire has threatened the science facilities more than the 29,482-acre Contreras Fire.

The observatory, on the Tohono O’odham Nation about 55 miles southwest of Tucson, was established in 1958 and now hosts 22 optical telescopes and two radio telescopes, including several instruments owned and operated by the University of Arizona.


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