What goes up must come down

China’s Tiangong-1 space station is expected to fall to Earth in late March, but it’s hardly the first (or most massive) manmade object to plunge through the planet’s atmosphere. At nearly 19,000 pounds, Tiangong-1 is huge, but here’s how the space station stacks up to other structures that have plummeted back to the planet. And for comparison, we’ve included the International Space Station, which is still in operation but may one day be decommissioned in a similar manner.

Object Weight (lbs) Reentry date Reentry type Reentry location
Mir(USSR) 268,000 03/23/2001 Controlled Pacific Ocean
Skylab(USA) 169,950 07/11/1979 Uncontrolled Indian Ocean/Western Australia
Salyut 7(USSR) 43,704 02/07/1991 Uncontrolled Argentina
Salyut 6(USSR) 43,700 07/29/1982 Controlled Unknown
Cosmos 557(USSR) 42,769 05/22/1973 Uncontrolled Unknown
International Space Station 925,335 2028 (Expected) Still in orbit TBD
Tiangong-1(China) 18,800 03/2018 (Expected) Still in orbit TBD

Sources: NASA, Getty Images, The Aerospace Corporation

Interactive: Jiachuan Wu / NBC News