It depends on the mission.
All launch vehicles are controlled by their individual launch facilities until the mission clock starts, which is at the end of the "countdown". The countdown is a negative clock count to zero; once the vehicle launches, the mission clock starts into a positive clock count. At the point the vehicle reaches space, the mission control center takes over.
For the shuttle program, Mission Control is in Houston at the Johnson Space Center. The Hubble Telescope, one of my old programs, is controlled from the Space Telescope Science Institute at Johns Hopkins University. Deep Space missions, such as the Mars probes, Cassini and Galileo are controlled from the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, CA. JPL also controls the furthest craft from Earth, the Voyager probe launched in the early 70's and now headed out of the solar system.
Some satellites are controlled from other non-NASA stations, such as military satellites and commercial satellites.
Before and during the very first part of a launch, missions are controlled from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, but as the shuttle or other vehicle clears the launch tower, control passes to Johnson Space Center in Houston Texas.
The control center that Apollo 11 took off from was Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The Mission Control Center in Houston, Texas, oversaw the mission once it was in space.
Huntsville Alabama is the home of Redstone Arsenal (the US Army missile and rocket center), NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, and the US Space and Rocket Center.
The Space and Rocket Center is in Huntsville, Alabama.
The home of NASA's mission control center, known as the Johnson Space Center, is located in Houston, Texas. Specifically, the Mission Control Center (MCC) is situated within the Johnson Space Center complex, where it manages human spaceflight missions and operations. This facility has played a crucial role in various significant space missions, including the Apollo moon landings and the Space Shuttle program.
The two main space centers in the United States are NASA's Kennedy Space Center, located on Merritt Island, Florida, and NASA's Johnson Space Center, situated in Houston, Texas. Kennedy Space Center is primarily responsible for launching spacecraft, while Johnson Space Center focuses on astronaut training and mission control operations. Both centers play crucial roles in the nation's space exploration efforts.
The U.S. Space & Rocket Center is located in Huntsville, Alabama. It is a museum that displays rockets and artifacts of the U.S. space program.
Mission Control, located at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.
The major US space centers are located in different places, such as NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Johnson Space Center in Texas, and Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama. Other important space facilities are also located in California, Virginia, and Ohio.
NASA does not have traditional control towers like airports do. NASA's mission control center is located at the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. This is where they monitor space missions and communicate with astronauts aboard the International Space Station.
NASA has several control centers in the United States. Houston, Texas is one of the main cities that has a NASA Control Center. There is also a NASA control center in Cape Kennedy, Florida. Both Cape Kennedy and Houston have space museums that are a big tourist attraction in their areas.
To put up the flag of their country.