A personnel list of Spacedock One in orbit of Earth.
Unnamed []
Civilians in cafeteria []
These civilians were present in the cafeteria at the spacedock in 2285, when the USS Enterprise returned home. They all reacted in disbelief as the viewed the battle damage the ship had suffered. (Star Trek III: The Search for Spock)
Cleaning man in cafeteria []
This cleaning man was present in the cafeteria of the spacedock, and witnessed the theft of the Enterprise in 2285. (Star Trek III: The Search for Spock)
Officers in cafeteria []
These Starfleet officers, including a female commander, were present in the Spacedock cafeteria when the Enterprise returned home in 2285. They all reacted in disbelief as the viewed the battle damage the ship had suffered. (Star Trek III: The Search for Spock)
Space Dock Controller []
This female Space Dock Controller responded to Nyota Uhura's request sent to approach control that the USS Enterprise was ready for docking maneuver, following its return from the Genesis sector in 2285. The controller responded that the Enterprise was "cleared to dock", then after Admiral James T. Kirk confirmed that Space Dock had control, she acknowledged, "Affirmative, Enterprise. Enjoy the ride, and welcome home." (Star Trek III: The Search for Spock)
Spacedoor controllers 1 []
These two Starfleet officers served as controllers for the spacedock in 2285, when the Enterprise returned to Earth. (Star Trek III: The Search for Spock)
Spacedoor controllers 2 []
These two Starfleet officers served as controllers for the spacedock in 2286, when an unknown alien probe reached Earth and disabled all technology, including the spacedock. (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home)
Background information[]
More Spacedock personnel were originally to have been seen in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home than those that appear in the final version of that film. As the senior officers from the Enterprise journeyed through the facility's docking bay towards the new ship USS Enterprise-A, audience members – gathered by the space station's windows – were to have cheered the travelers on. "With everyone cheering, screaming and yelling, it would have been an emotional high," said Steve Meerson, who co-wrote the film's story. (The Making of the Trek Films, 3rd ed., p. 64)