Trump administration set to shutter iconic research center in New York
Scientists at an iconic NASA research center in New York City have been told they have until the end of the month to vacate their building and everything in it— with nowhere else to go.
Why it matters: The closure of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, which is housed in a building owned by Columbia University and made famous for housing the diner that appears in "Seinfeld," is the latest blow to scientists and climate change researchers from the Trump administration and DOGE.
Scientists at an iconic NASA research center in New York City have been told they have until the end of the month to vacate their building and everything in it— with nowhere else to go.
Why it matters: The closure of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, which is housed in a building owned by Columbia University and made famous for housing the diner that appears in "Seinfeld," is the latest blow to scientists and climate change researchers from the Trump administration and DOGE.
- Scientists at Goddard who spoke to Axios warn that critical work — including the maintenance of global temperature records dating back to the 1880s used by economists, insurance companies and private developers — is at risk with the Center's closure.
- Home to more than 100 scientists, the Goddard center is nearly as old as NASA itself, founded in 1966. It's where the terms "black hole" and "quasar" were coined.
- "This is existential for us," said Joy Romanski, a climate scientist at Columbia University who works at the center. "We can't recreate this anywhere else. And it doesn't work to be remote."
- The others, who work directly for NASA, asked for anonymity for fear of retribution from the federal government.
- They were told to remove all belongings from the space, down to the bare walls.
- "This is highly destructive to us, and I believe it's intentional," one said.
- The White House's 2026 budget proposal would slash funding even further for science and tech agencies — including NASA.
- The administration is also considering deep cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, while seeking to end much of its climate change work.