Background
He was born in Mudanya (Tirilye-Zeytinbağı) near Bursa, Turkey on October 17, 1930.
He was born in Mudanya (Tirilye-Zeytinbağı) near Bursa, Turkey on October 17, 1930.
He graduated from Bursa Erkek Lisesi and Haydarpaşa Lisesi before choosing to move to the United States.
Early on, Akbay was recognized as a gifted child with exceptional mental aptitude. In 1956, he received a Bachelor of Surgery degree in Engineering Physics from the University of Tennessee. Akbay was personally selected by Doctor Wernher von Braun, the famous astronautical engineer, to be the lead aerospace engineer for the F1 Engine Integration on the Apollo Saturn V-S1C Rocket.
Mr.
Akbay also spearheaded the Saturn 1B/H-1 Engine Integration for the Apollo-Soyuz Rendezvous Mission. Between 1963 and 1975, Akbay served in various managerial capacities during National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Apollo, Skylab and Apollo-Soyuz projects. His 31-year career at National Aeronautics and Space Administration earned him recognition as one of American’s early space pioneers.
In Turkey, at the end of the 1960s, newspaper headlines heralded him as the "Turkish Villager Who Helped Put Manitoba on the Moon".
After his career with National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Akbay worked on the transfer of space technology to the United States. private sector and the commercialization of other federally funded technologies. During a meeting in 1996 about technology transfer, Akbay introduced Kaya Tuncer to the idea of building a Space Camp at the Aegean Free Zone.
Until his death in July 2003, Akbay was an enthusiastic supporter of Space Camp Turkey, attending its opening ceremony in June 2000 and following its progress and developments.