The Day

End of an Era

Farewell, Queen of the Skies

- By JULIE JOHNSSON

After a 54-year run, Boeing has ended production of the 747 jumbo jet

THE FIRST AND FINAL 747 JUMBO jet models both started with a handshake deal.

Back in the mid-1960s, the leaders of Boeing and PanAm came to an agreement that if the U.S. plane maker pushed ahead with the audacious new design, the airline would in turn go ahead and buy the giant jetliner.

That gentlemen’s agreement would kick-start one of the most successful programs in civil aviation, single-handedly transformi­ng the way the world flies and giving the Queen of the Skies, as the 747 came to be known, the undisputed reign over the world’s flight paths for decades to come.

No other airplane captured the public imaginatio­n quite like the humpbacked jumbo jet, nor illustrate­d the rewards that can flow from breathtaki­ng risk on developing a new aircraft from the ground up. The 747 was an emblem of era when U.S. innovation was defined by pushing technical boundaries with moonshot projects like the Saturn V rocket — another Boeing effort.

A team led by Boeing engineer Joe Sutter designed and built the jumbo in less than two-and-a-half years, an unimaginab­le feat by today’s standards. They trailblaze­d concepts that forever changed long-distance travel: from the 747’s twin-aisle layout to overhead bins and in-flight entertainm­ent. Early models redefined luxury travel with a spiral staircase to a swanky upper-deck lounge.

Now, following a 54-year run, Boeing has ended production of the 747. When the last of the jets flew away from its Seattle-area factory on Wednesday, the curtain fell on the four-engine era, after Airbus already gave up its ill-fated attempt at a rival jetliner. It axed the A380 double decker in 2019.

In total, Boeing built 1,574 of the

747 model, from passenger versions to freighters to special editions like a NASA-commission­ed version that carried the space shuttle or the Air Force One for U.S. presidents. Over the past

decade, the giant aircraft was eclipsed by smaller, more nimble models like Boeing’s own 777 or Airbus SE’s A350 that only have two engines but still manage to fly the same routes, albeit at much lower operating costs.

The last iteration of the 747 also owed its existence to a handshake. This time, it happened at a dinner in the mid-2000s at Seattle’s upscale Fairmont Hotel, where Deutsche Lufthansa executives were pressing their Boeing counterpar­ts to upgrade the 747 with technology being created for its most advanced jet, the 787 Dreamliner. Listening with rapt attention: Sutter, the legendary father of the 747, then well into his 80s and long retired but

still a force to be reckoned with inside Boeing.

“He turned to his senior management leadership team and said, ‘Guys, just do it,’” recalled Nico Buchholz, at the time a Lufthansa executive who attended the gathering. “As history has shown, they did it and Lufthansa did buy it.”

And while the 747-8, as that iteration was dubbed, wasn’t a resounding sales success, freighter versions of that plane could still be flying as late as the 2050s, like the final model being delivered this week, to Atlas Air Worldwide.

Aviation’s advancemen­ts, from the 747 to the Concorde to the space

shuttle, had long been driven by the goal of going further, faster and higher. But over time, another considerat­ion has come into play: cost.

Airbus’s debacle with the A380, arguably the last time a manufactur­er penned a radical new design layout, only strengthen­ed a new mantra of finessing and improving existing airframes rather than pushing the boundaries of what’s physically and economical­ly possible. Boeing has said that it won’t come up with a new aircraft design this decade, underscori­ng a management ethos that puts efficiency before experiment­s.

No other aircraft encapsulat­es that approach quite like the A320 and 737 Max models, which are essentiall­y more fuel-efficient versions of planes conceived decades ago and account for the vast majority of deliveries — and profit — and both plane makers.

That low-risk mind-set notwithsta­nding, a new wave of innovation is beginning taking shape, driven by climate change and an urgent need to curb emissions. Boeing plans to build and test-fly with NASA a full-scale prototype of a narrow-body jet with extra-long, thin wings that could eventually succeed the 737, while Airbus pursues breakthrou­ghs with fuels, like hydrogen. Upstarts like Joby Aviation and Archer Aviation are looking to replace ground transport with flying taxis.

“There will be significan­t improvemen­ts,” said Buchholz. Only this time, “it will start with small aircraft.”

 ?? JOHN FROSCHAUER/AP PHOTOS ?? The final Boeing 747 is displayed at the assembly plant during a ceremony for the delivery of the jumbo jet to Atlas Air, Tuesday in Everett,
Wash. Since it debuted in 1969, the 747 has served as a cargo plane, a commercial aircraft capable of carrying nearly 500 passengers, and the Air Force One presidenti­al aircraft.
JOHN FROSCHAUER/AP PHOTOS The final Boeing 747 is displayed at the assembly plant during a ceremony for the delivery of the jumbo jet to Atlas Air, Tuesday in Everett, Wash. Since it debuted in 1969, the 747 has served as a cargo plane, a commercial aircraft capable of carrying nearly 500 passengers, and the Air Force One presidenti­al aircraft.
 ?? ?? An illustrati­on on the side of the final Boeing 747 commemorat­es Joe Sutter, who was the chief engineer in creating the jumbo jet over 50 years ago.
An illustrati­on on the side of the final Boeing 747 commemorat­es Joe Sutter, who was the chief engineer in creating the jumbo jet over 50 years ago.
 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? A Boeing 747 “Dreamlifte­r” takes off.
AP FILE PHOTO A Boeing 747 “Dreamlifte­r” takes off.

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