Announcement and first project The Roddenberry Estate and computer graphics company OTOY announced a partnership called the Roddenberry Archive in August 2021, around the 100th birthday of
Star Trek creator
Gene Roddenberry, who died in 1991. OTOY founder and CEO Jules Urbach, a childhood friend of Gene Roddenberry's son
Rod Roddenberry, worked on the
Roddenberry Vault Blu-ray that was released for the 50th anniversary of the first
Star Trek series,
Star Trek: The Original Series (1966–1969). The archive was being curated by longtime
Star Trek production artists
Mike and
Denise Okuda,
Daren Dochterman, and
Doug Drexler. Key documents, images, blueprints, and models from Gene's career were captured digitally using OTOY's LightStage scanning software and stored on the company's RNDR
blockchain computing network. OTOY previously announced archives for the art of
Mike "Beeple" Winkelmann, an OTOY board member, and illustrator
Alex Ross; Winkelmann joined the Roddenberry Archive as a creative consultant and Ross provided new art for it. In addition to recording behind-the-scenes materials, the archive team wanted to capture completed visuals from the franchise. Urbach said they thought a full internal digital recreation of the starship
USS Enterprise would be an ambitious but realistic first project. They chose to base it on the ship's appearance in
Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979), as that refit version of the NCC-1701 had the most available data. The team worked with holographic display company LightField Lab on the recreation, which was described as a "fully immersive holographic installation experience". It includes all rooms seen in the film as well as others based on reference designs, blueprints, and other research. The 100 GB digital model was featured during
Apple's
October 2021 keynote event, demonstrating the capacity of the
Apple M1 Pro chip to hold that amount of data. While working on the
Enterprise recreation, the archive team decided to expand the scope of the Roddenberry Archive. Urbach said they wanted it to be a full "history of
Star Trek, not just the assets, not just the props, but the stories—the timeline in visual form—to the best of our abilities." They made a goal to eventually recreate every version of the
Enterprise.
"The Cage" project and first concept videos The Roddenberry Archive announced a project in May 2022 dedicated to "
The Cage" (1964), the first
pilot episode for
The Original Series. Sets, props, costumes, and characters from the episode were recreated virtually, including a life-size version of the
Enterprise original bridge set.
Robert Butler, the episode's director, provided hours of behind-the-scenes material to the archive and reviewed the recreated sets in March of that year. By that time,
Star Trek: Picard (2020–2023) production designer
Dave Blass had joined the archive team.
Lora Johnson, author of the reference book ''Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise
(1987), was consulted for the starship recreations. In addition to Butler, interviews took place on the recreated sets with Christopher Hunter, the son of Jeffrey Hunter who played Captain Christopher Pike in the episode; Sean Kenney, who replaced Jeffrey Hunter as Pike for later episodes of The Original Series''; and Sandra Lee Gimpel, who portrayed a Talosian in "The Cage".
Laurel Goodwin, who played
J. M. Colt in the episode, was expected to be interviewed but died earlier that week. After noticing a resemblance between Urbach's wife Mahé Thaissa and Goodwin's portrayal of Colt, the archive team planned to accompany Goodwin's interview with new footage of Thaissa as Colt on the recreated sets, filmed using
virtual production techniques.
Carlos Baena, who joined OTOY as a freelance director in early 2022, directed a short concept video featuring Thaissa as Colt that was released under the title "765874". Footage from the interviews was also released in 2022 as "supplemental video logs". The archive's recreations of "The Cage" sets and assets were made available for fans to explore using a television and game controller at the
56-Year Mission: Las Vegas fan convention in August 2022. Urbach reiterated their plan to eventually use immersive technologies, such as holographic displays, to allow people to walk through the recreated sets in a similar way to the franchise's
holodeck technology. Also at the convention, a panel was held with members of the archive team. Moderated by
Gates McFadden, who plays
Beverly Crusher in the franchise, they discussed their progress with the archive and showed a new concept video, "765874 – Memory Wall", which expands on the first video. In addition to Thaissa as Colt, the second video features Lawrence Selleck as
Spock. Prosthetics and digital technology were used to recreate the appearance of original actor
Leonard Nimoy, who died in 2015. Both characters are shown at different stages of the
Star Trek timeline using scans of real costumes plus some concepts and imagery from unfilmed projects. Visual effects company BLR VFX worked on the video. The archive team also showed test footage of their technology being used to recreate
Star Trek: The Animated Series (1973–74) in live-action with visuals that are consistent with
The Original Series.
Generations shorts and The Archive Following the release of
Picard series finale in April 2023, the Roddenberry Archive's digital collection was made available through an online web portal for three weeks. It had more than four million visitors in that time. The site included full digital recreations of every
Enterprise bridge. It also included a documentary about the history of the
Enterprise bridges, narrated by
John de Lancie who portrays
Q in the franchise; a featurette that previews an hours-long interview with original
Star Trek actor
William Shatner, who played Captain
James T. Kirk; a featurette about the
USS Enterprise–D from
Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987–1994) and its recreation for
Picard, with
The Next Generation director
James L. Conway, director-producer
David Livingston, program consultant
David Gerrold, illustrator
Andrew Probert, and production designer
Herman Zimmerman, as well as
Picard showrunner
Terry Matalas; and a third short in the concept video series, "765874 – Regeneration", which is connected to the film
Star Trek Generations (1994). The short features original music by
Johan Söderqvist. The archive team also announced that they had recreated the voice of Gene's wife
Majel Barrett, who played different characters in the franchise including the voice of the
Enterprise computer, based on phonetic recordings that she made before her death in 2008. Rod was pleased that the archive could continue his mother's legacy in addition to his father's, and fulfill her wish to continue voicing the
Enterprise computer after her death. The digital collection was again made available in February 2024 through the web portal as well as
The Archive, a new
mixed reality app for the
Apple Vision Pro headset. The app was launched in conjunction with
Paramount Game Studios. Rod described the immersive experience as "a remarkable milestone in realizing [Gene]'s vision for the holodeck". It was accompanied by new interviews featuring Gerrold and original
Star Trek actor
Walter Koenig, who played
Pavel Chekov. An expansion of
The Archive was announced in April, coinciding with the conclusion of
Star Trek: Discovery (2017–2024). A new documentary exploring the creation of
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993–1999) and its
titular space station was released, narrated by
Deep Space Nine star
Armin Shimerman who portrayed
Quark in that series and other
Star Trek media. An expansion commemorating the 30th anniversary of
Generations was launched in November 2024. This focused on a new concept video titled "
765874 – Unification", which features Thaissa as Colt, Selleck as Spock, and
Sam Witwer as James T. Kirk. Practical and digital prosthetics were used to recreate the appearance of a younger Kirk as portrayed by Shatner.
Gary Lockwood and
Robin Curtis reprised their respective
Star Trek roles as
Gary Mitchell and
Saavik for the video, which was filmed with a combination of location photography, virtual production, and
computer-generated set extensions. The project was executive produced by Shatner and
Susan Bay Nimoy, the widow of Leonard Nimoy.
Michael Giacchino returned from previous
Star Trek media to compose original music for the video. Additional featurettes, including a retrospective interview with Shatner, were also released. Another expansion was launched in August 2025 ahead of
Star Trek 59th anniversary, with documentaries on the unproduced series
Star Trek: Phase II, director
Nicholas Meyer, and authors
Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens. ==
The Archive ==