In the frame of this mission the Space Center of Liege was involved in the optical design optimization and related analysis, and VUV on ground calibration. The ICON mission (NASA) will explore the boundary between Earth and space to understand the physical connection between our world and our space environment. Recent NASA missions have shown how dramatically variable the region of space near Earth is, where ionized plasma and neutral gas collide and react. This region, the ionosphere, has long been known to respond to space weather drivers from the sun, but in this century we have come to realize that the energy and momentum of our own low altitude atmosphere regularly affect the ionosphere with equal or greater magnitude. ICON will weigh the impacts of these two drivers as they exert change on our space environment. During the day, photoelectrons colliding with atmospheric neutrals, N2 and O, produce emissions and by observing the limb brightness of the N2 Lyman-Birge-Hopfield (LBH) band and of the OI 135.6 nm line, the density ratio of the neutral N2 and O atmospheric constituents can be retrieved. At night the recombination of O+ ions with ionospheric electrons also creates OI 135.6 nm emissions and the nighttime electron density can be estimated from the limb brightness of 135.6 nm. ICON FUV will measure the altitude distribution of the OI 135.6 nm and N2 LBH dayglow emissions at 157 nm and the altitude and spatial distribution of the OI 135.6 nm nightglow emissions. These quantities can then be used to determine dayside O and N2 densities and altitude profiles, and the nightside O+ densities in the F-region. The ICON-FUV instrument is based upon the IMAGE Spectrographic Imager (SI) [1] [2] [3]. Like this predecessor, ICON-FUV is a two-channel imager that uses a grating spectrometer for spectral discrimination [4] [5] [6]. The two channels are required to provide the daytime profiles of two wavelengths characterizing the N2 and O species (centered at 157 nm and 135.6 nm respectively). This grating type of spectrographic imager minimizes contamination by out-of-band light leaks that are a typical problem for non-grating type FUV cameras. The instrument is composed by two parts, a Czerny-Turner spectrograph selecting the science wavelengths. This spectrograph is then combined with two imagers respectively working in the two wavebands of interest. The challenge of this space instrument was to be designed for a very wide FOV (24° vertical by 18° horizontal).