Rick Sternbach, who designed the
Borg cube for
The Next Generation, and Richard James collaborated over several months to design the USS
Voyager. Sternbach started work on the new design in the fall of 1993 when the new series was announced. By the spring of 1994, the design had started to mature, and was smaller than
The Next Generation Enterprise-D with features like the ability to land on a planet's surface. The interior design focused on the bridge, which set the tone for the rest of ship. Throughout the design process, the main goal was to make it new and appealing while still holding in part to the same familiar design.
Voyager special effect shots were done with both miniatures and CGI. The miniature shots of the
Voyager model were used as a benchmark to improve the CGI shots. Two different computer models were developed from the physical model by two different companies that scanned it, Amblin Imaging and
Foundation Imaging. Amblin won an Emmy for
Voyager opening CGI title visuals featuring USS
Voyager passing through space, but the weekly episode exteriors were captured with hand-built miniatures of
Voyager. By late 1996 (midway through season three), certain exterior shots were fully CGI. Another challenge of the design was coordinating the interior set design with exterior shots, in particular the location of key rooms and the design of windows. These were important, for example, in shots that crossed over from outside the spacecraft to inside the spacecraft in one filming shot.
Mission Voyager was launched in 2371. The crew's first mission was to track down a
Maquis ship in the
Badlands. An alien force called the
Caretaker transported both
Voyager and the Maquis vessel across 70,000
light-years to the
Delta Quadrant, damaging
Voyager and killing several crewmembers including the medical staff, helm officer, first officer and the chief engineer.
Voyager and the Maquis ship are ultimately stranded in the Delta Quadrant to prevent a
genocide of the
Ocampans, a species on a nearby planet under the Caretaker's protection from the Kazon, an antagonistic race native to the Delta Quadrant who seek the resources of the Ocampa. Captain Janeway orders the destruction of the device that could transport
Voyager and the Maquis vessel home, thereby protecting the Ocampa. Stranded, and with the Maquis ship also destroyed, both crews integrate and work together for the anticipated 75-year journey home. The intended crew complement was 141 Starfleet personnel, This figure fluctuated during its time in the Delta Quadrant, gaining or losing count due to mishaps, adopted crew, births, and voluntary departures; they start the second year of their journey with 152 people on board, at one point during the fifth year of its journey, there were 150 people on board.
Starfleet Command eventually becomes aware of the ship's presence in the Delta Quadrant and is later able to establish regular communication. After a seven-year journey, during which the acquisition of new technologies and assistance from various allies had already enabled the ship to travel a distance that otherwise would have taken over thirty years, the ship returned to the Alpha Quadrant via a
Borg transwarp conduit. In the
Star Trek: Lower Decks season 4 premiere "Twovix",
Voyager is being converted into a museum when a dormant macrovirus wreaks havoc on the ship. After the incident is concluded,
Voyager is retired to a museum with the episode's events being added to its exhibits. In
Star Trek: Prodigy season 2,
Voyager is replaced by the USS
Voyager-A which is described by the Doctor as being a
Lamarr-class science vessel retrofitted with technologies that
Voyager brought back from the Delta Quadrant. The new ship is commanded by now-Vice Admiral Janeway on its maiden voyage. There are several references made to the original
Voyager with Janeway having a model of the ship in her ready room. During this time, Janeway also celebrates the 14th anniversary of her command of
Voyager which was Janeway's first command.
Voyager is seen briefly in the
Star Trek: Picard third-season episode "The Bounty", now decommissioned and part of Starfleet's Fleet Museum.
Design and capabilities The 15-deck (257 rooms),
Voyager was built at the
Utopia Planitia Fleet Yards and launched from Earth Station McKinley.
Voyager was equipped with 47 bio-neural gel packs and two
holodecks. It was equipped with a class-9
warp drive, allowing for a maximum sustainable speed of Warp 9.975. The ship was initially equipped with 40 photon torpedoes with type VI warheads, two of which were equipped with
tricobalt devices. Both tricobalt devices were used to destroy the Caretaker's array. In the final episode, an alternate future Kathryn Janeway equipped the ship with transphasic torpedoes and ablative hull armor. Cargo bay 2 is equipped with several Borg alcoves when Captain Janeway forms an alliance with the Borg and several Borg are forced to work aboard
Voyager during the alliance.
Seven of Nine and
Harry Kim construct an astrometrics lab from scratch with Borg-enhanced sensors, knowledge of which Seven of Nine retained from the Borg. ==Shuttlecraft==