Slide 63 of 99
Notes:
The ~$3-billion Russian segment is visible at right in this illustration from 1994. The original plan called for a first launch in June 1997 (FGB/Zarya) followed by the Russian Service Module in September. ISS would be permanently manned from January 1998 onwards. The small Russian laboratory modules (bottom right), Science and Power Platform (upper right) and most of the other components were derived from the old “Mir 1.5” plan.
Another view of the Russian ISS segment, circa 1997. By this time the launch schedule had been delayed by more than two years due to Russia's economic problems. Many ISS elements had been moved from Russian rockets to the US Space Shuttle. The Russian laboratory modules (center) had been replaced with a larger FGB-derived design to save money. Boeing and Khrunichev announced in July 2000 that they would build a privately financed module. The “Commercial Space Module” will be based on the FGB design and launched as early as 2002.