- TWA Flight Center
The TWA Flight Center was the original name for Terminal 5 at
New York City 's Idlewild Airport (nowJohn F. Kennedy International Airport ), designed byEero Saarinen forTrans World Airlines . Under rehabilitation since December 2005, it will be known as the JetBlue Flight Center after its new occupant,JetBlue Airways . It was designated a historic landmark by the City of New York in 1994 and placed on theNational Register of Historic Places onSeptember 7 ,2005 .The terminal had a futuristic air. The interior had wide glass windows that opened onto parked TWA jets; departing passengers would walk to planes through round, red-carpeted tubes. It was a far different structure and form than Saarinen's design for the current main terminal of
Washington Dulles International Airport , which utilized mobile lounges to take passengers to airplanes.Design of the terminal was awarded to
Detroit -based Eero Saarinen and Associates. It was completed in 1962 and became the airport's most famous landmark. Gates in the terminal were close to the street and this made it difficult to create centralized ticketing and security checkpoints. This building was the first airline terminal to haveclosed circuit television , a centralpublic address system,baggage carousel s, an electronic schedule board and precursors to the now ubiquitous baggage weigh-in scales. JFK was rare in the airport industry for having company owned and designed terminals; other airline terminals were built byEastern Airlines andAmerican Airlines . Individually branded terminals included the Worldport ofPan American World Airways and theSundrome ofNational Airlines .Following American Airlines' buyout of TWA in 2001, Terminal 5 went out of service. The
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey had proposed converting the main portion of the building into arestaurant and conference center, but some architectural critics opposed this move.In December 2005,
JetBlue Airways , which occupies the adjacent Terminal 6 and is the airport's fastest-growing carrier, began construction of an expanded terminal facility, which will utilize the front portion of Saarinen's Terminal 5 as an entry point. The peripheral air-side parts of Terminal 5 have been demolished to make space for a mostly new terminal, which will have 26 gates and is on the verge of opening (Oct 1, 2008).Besides being well-known to JFK passengers and architectural buffs, portions of the 2002
Steven Spielberg movie "Catch Me if You Can " were filmed there.ee also
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Thin-shell structure
*List of thin shell structures External links
* [http://www.t508.com/ JetBlue's Official Terminal 5 Information Site]
* [http://www.panynj.gov/AboutthePortAuthority/PressCenter/PressReleases/PressRelease/index.php?id=558 Port Authority Press Release on Renovation]
* [http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/twa/ Galinsky Tour of Building, Visiting Information]
* [http://www.boston.com/news/globe/ideas/articles/2004/11/07/saarinen_rising?pg=full Boston Globe on Saarinen and the popularity of the terminal]
* [http://www.preservenys.org/seven2001.htm#TWA Case to Save Terminal in 2001]
* [http://www.rankel.net/stephenlauren/planes/TWA%20Terminal/Old_Terminal_5/index.htm Interior Pictures as of 1 Feb 07]
* [http://www.nyc-architecture.com/BKN/BKN002.htm Close Up Interior Shots]
* [http://www.lightningfield.com/extra/0103twa/index.html Interior and Exterior Shots of Terminal 5]
* [http://flickr.com/photos/plemeljr/tags/terminal5/ More shots of Terminal 5]
* [http://words.grubbykid.com/2006/07/14/terminal_5.html Web blog post on the new JetBlue terminal and the future of the TWA terminal]
* [http://www.jetblue.com/about/jfk/t5.html New Terminal 5 pictures & information on JetBlue's website]
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