Manila Bulletin

A last look at NYC’s 1960’s-era TWA Flight Center where a new hotel will rise

- By KATIE REILLY

NEW YORK (Reuters) –Thousands of visitors are expected at New York City's John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport on Sunday to get a last look at the iconic architectu­re of the Trans World Airlines (TWA) Flight Center before the futuristic 1960's building is converted into a hotel.

The terminal, built in 1962 as an uplifting symbol of the Jet Age, was designed by renowned Finnish-born architect Eero Saarinen, who also created St. Louis’ Gateway Arch. The terminal’s cavernous arched white ceilings will be renovated to include guest rooms, conference space and an observatio­n deck.

The “Mad Men”-era edifice, now a national historic landmark, was used by TWA until the airline went bankrupt in 2001.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced in September the approval of the $265-million hotel project, funded mostly by a partnershi­p between JetBlue Airways Corp and MCR Developmen­t, the seventh-largest hotel owner-operator in the United States, according to its website. The 500-room hotel is expected to open in 2018.

“It is one of the most incredible pieces of architectu­re that you could walk into,” said Jim Steven, manager of redevelopm­ent for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the owner of JFK Airport in the New York City borough of Queens.

Steven said he expected up to 5,000 people to visit the terminal on Sunday, part of the annual Open House New York event aimed at inviting visitors to tour buildings that are typically closed to the public.

Each year, former TWA employees wearing their old uniforms are among those who return to the beloved midcentury modern-style building, which first opened during John F. Kennedy's presidency.

“We know that there are people flying into New York City to see that building,” said Gregory Wessner, executive director of Open House New York. “This year, I think there's a special attraction to it.”

Tyler Morse, chief executive for MCR Developmen­t, said he planned to keep the terminal the focus of the hotel, preserving its striking architectu­ral features while adapting the space into a lobby flanked by two six-story towers with guest rooms.

“We want to bring it back to life as it was in 1962,” said Morse, who plans to break ground on the project in the summer of 2016.

 ??  ?? BACK TO THE FUTURE – People look at the Trans World Airlines Flight Center at John F. Kennedy Airport in the Queens
borough of New York, October 18, 2015. Thousands of visitors are expected
at New York’s John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport
on...
BACK TO THE FUTURE – People look at the Trans World Airlines Flight Center at John F. Kennedy Airport in the Queens borough of New York, October 18, 2015. Thousands of visitors are expected at New York’s John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport on...

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