Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Historic terminal gets redo

NYC’s JFK wing to become hotel

- VERENA DOBNIK

NEW YORK — The famous winged TWA terminal at New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport came out of its decades-long retirement last week with a new life as a luxury hotel.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo was on hand for a ribboncutt­ing ceremony opening the $268 million project.

He said he remembers seeing the terminal as a Queens boy “and saying, ‘Wow! Wow! It was ahead of its time and it was New York’s vision and creativity and boldness, and outside of the box thinking that made New York, New York.’”

The Finnish architect Eero Saarinen didn’t have a hotel in mind when he designed the futuristic structure that opened in 1962.

Those were the heady jet-age days of the first spacefligh­ts and President John F. Kennedy’s promise of a moon landing.

Developer Tyler Morse hopes the proximity to the tarmac will draw travelers who don’t want to fight nightmaris­h city traffic to catch their flights.

Beyond today’s practical concerns lies a half-century-old dream.

“This TWA Flight Center was built as a cathedral to aviation,” Morse said.

The history of TWA and its era will be on display in the 200,000-square-foot curving lobby that has no right angles, like the rest of the building, and is in

TWA’s red and white colors.

Hotel rooms are in an attached building.

Guests will pay about $250 a night in 512 rooms with thick, noise-dampening windows near JFK’s Terminal 5 in view of planes taking off.

The hotel has six restaurant­s, including one operated by celebrity chef Jean-Georges Vongericht­en. One of its eight bars is housed inside a vintage TWA aircraft Morse said was once purchased and used by South American drug dealers.

The hotel also features a

10,000-square-foot observatio­n deck with a pool.

Kennedy is catching up with other internatio­nal flight hubs that have hotels. Right now, most New York options are either a few budget accommodat­ions in a neighborho­od by the airport, or a long train or cab ride into the city center.

New York’s aging airport, which is itself undergoing a $13 billion renovation, was home to TWA until the airline went out of business in 2001 and was absorbed by American Airlines.

A lone TWA sign still marks its winged, white former terminal that remains a bold, elegant example of mid-20th century design.

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