Fresh on the heels of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's announcement of plans to try to lure World Expo 2020 to Moffett Field, the site's federal landlord said Monday it loved the idea of having Silicon Valley host its first world's fair, even though the campaign is still long on ambition and short on detail.

"If they can put this together and win the bid, NASA would be willing and able to be part of the team," said Lewis Braxton III, deputy director of NASA's Ames Research Center, steward of the approximately 1,800-acre property wedged into the bay's shore between Mountain View and Sunnyvale. "It was a bit of a surprise, but we're all elated because NASA Ames is all about being at the forefront of technology, and world fairs have always demonstrated what the world can look like 50 years into the future."

The plan, announced over the weekend during Schwarzenegger's visit to the Shanghai World Expo, is in its infancy, with little more than a news release and a few conceptual drawings completed. Spearheaded by the Bay Area Council, the dream picked up some heft with the governor's embrace. But until Monday, it was unclear precisely how receptive Moffett's landlord was to the idea.
Braxton said NASA Administrator Charles Bolden was in town last week, and "we gave him a heads-up that we might be selected as a possible site for the expo," Braxton said. "But it's still very preliminary."
The Bay Area Council, a business-sponsored public-policy

advocacy group, threw its weight behind the former naval air station, which was decommissioned in 1994, after passing on several other former military installations in the region. Working with the nonprofit University Associates-Silicon Valley, which occupies a 77-acre site on Moffett Field, the council sold Schwarzenegger on the idea of having Silicon Valley host the expo, an event that lasts six months, takes place every five years, and can draw tens of millions of visitors.

One enticing byproduct of an expo at Moffett would be the cluster of brand-new cutting-edge buildings left behind, something not lost on Braxton, who said "it would be nice to be left with a solid infrastructure on the site when it's over. We're the primary research center for the NASA family, and since we're in the heart of Silicon Valley, any time the agency has a challenging problem, they come to us, and we can muscle together the intellectual capability needed to solve it. Having that infrastructure in place would work well for us.''
And while there's been no discussion yet about a NASA-sponsored pavilion, Braxton said such a facility would "give us the chance to demonstrate the technology we've developed here. We'd love to demonstrate what we're doing for the American taxpayer and humankind in general."