Jump to content

英文维基 | 中文维基 | 日文维基 | 草榴社区

Hughes Airport (California)

Coordinates: 33°58′30″N 118°25′01″W / 33.975000°N 118.417000°W / 33.975000; -118.417000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hughes Airport
Black-and-white aerial photo, facing west toward Pacific Ocean, long runway and hangars surrounded by parked cars, beyond airport are bluffs, roads, fields and homes
“Aerial photograph of Hughes Airport, Culver City, California, circa early 1960s”
Summary
Airport typePrivate
OwnerHoward Hughes
OperatorHughes Aircraft Company
Locationcurrent day Playa Vista, Los Angeles
Opened1943 (1943)
Closed1986 (1986)
Time zonePST (-8:00)
 • Summer (DST)PDT (-7:00)
Elevation AMSL75 ft / 23 m
Coordinates33°58′30″N 118°25′01″W / 33.975000°N 118.417000°W / 33.975000; -118.417000
Maps
The neighborhood in which the majority of the Hughes Airport used to be; location of the runway is just south of where current day Jefferson Blvd runs
The neighborhood in which the majority of the Hughes Airport used to be; location of the runway is just south of where current day Jefferson Blvd runs
Hughes Airport is located in Western Los Angeles
Hughes Airport
Hughes Airport
Location of the former Hughes Airport in Western Los Angeles
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
23/5 8,800 2,682 Asphalt

The Hughes Airport (IATA: CVR) was a private airport owned by Howard Hughes for the Hughes Aircraft Company. It was located just north of the Westchester bluffs and district of Los Angeles, California, from 1940 until its closure in 1985. It was directly south of and along Jefferson Boulevard and Ballona Creek, the location of the present-day neighborhood of Playa Vista.

History

[edit]

In 1940, Howard Hughes bought 380 acres (150 ha) of the Ballona wetlands south of Jefferson Avenue in south-west Culver City. A total of 9,600 feet (2,900 m) were available for a runway and an unpaved runway 23/5 was operational in 1943. In 1948, 6,800 feet (2,100 m) were paved with asphalt, extended by 1962 to 8,800 feet (2,700 m).[1]

Takeoffs to the west had to be coordinated with nearby Los Angeles International Airport. The field served a number of aircraft and helicopter development projects of the Hughes Aircraft Co. and Hughes Tool Company (Summa Corporation).[2]

At one time, according to Noah Dietrich, it "was the longest runway on the West Coast."[3]: 103, 245 

Spruce Goose

[edit]
H4 Hercules pictured in 1982

The "Spruce Goose", officially known as the Hughes H-4 Hercules, was built here and moved in sections to the Port of Long Beach where it was re-assembled and made its first and only flight.[3] Afterward, a climate controlled hangar was built there, where it remained until 1980 when it was acquired by the Aero Club of Southern California, which put it on display under a large dome next to the Queen Mary until 1988 when it was sold to the Evergreen Aviation Museum where it sits today. A full-time crew of 300 workers, all sworn to secrecy, maintained the plane in flying condition in a climate-controlled hangar at the Port of Long Beach location.[3]: 210  The crew was reduced to 50 workers in 1962 and then disbanded after Hughes's death in 1976.[4]

By the mid-1990s, the former Hughes Aircraft hangars here, including the one that held the Hercules, were converted into sound stages. Scenes from movies such as Titanic, What Women Want, and End of Days have been filmed in the 315,000-square-foot (29,300 m2) aircraft hangar where Hughes created the flying boat. It also features in the computer game Crimson Skies. The hangar will be preserved as a structure eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Buildings.

Current usage

[edit]

The former Hughes Airport is currently occupied by the Playa Vista development.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields: California - West Los Angeles Area". airfields-freeman.com.
  2. ^ "Hughes Airport". California Airfields. 1940. Retrieved August 29, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c Dietrich, Noah; Thomas, Bob (1972). Howard, The Amazing Mr. Hughes. Greenwich: Fawcett Publications, Inc. pp. 174–175.
  4. ^ Dean, Paul (April 21, 1983). "The Man Who Keeps The Spruce Goose". Los Angeles Times. p. J1.
[edit]