
Mir-2 was a proposed space station developed by the Soviet Union (and briefly Russia following the fall of the USSR) in the 1980s to early 1990s, as a successor to the original Mir station. It was to have a slightly larger pressurized volume, a much higher power budget, and more modern and safer equipment. It consisted of a DOS-type Service Module, two Universal Docking Modules, two Docking/Airlock Compartments, and four specialized science modules. A large unpressurized truss structure was also present, which contained most of the equipment used for power production, heat rejection, communications, attitude control, and certain external scientific experiments. It was to be serviced by a combination of Soyuz, Progress, and Buran
In 1993, the Mir-2 program was merged with the American Space Station Freedom, as well as the European Man-Tended Free-Flyer Columbus and Japanese space station efforts, to form the International Space Station. Some elements of the ISS, including Zvezda, Pirs, Poisk, and Rassvet, are directly based on components developed and built for Mir-2.
All materials and textures are packed into the .blend file. Geometry nodes, instancing, and modifiers have been used to reduce file size and simplify editing. Includes articulation on the solar arrays, solar-dynamic power module, radiators, and robotic arm