Hum... the terminal at SBA (Santa Barbara, CA) is a good example of an "old" terminal still in use. It has been around from the 1940s at least. Terrific example of California mission-style architecture. -----Original Message----- From: The Airline List [mailto:AIRLINE@LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU] On Behalf Of Gerard M Foley Sent: Saturday, April 27, 2002 8:24 PM To: AIRLINE@LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU Subject: Old Airport Buildings From: "Bill Hough" <psa188@juno.com> Sent: Saturday, April 27, 2002 6:06 PM Subject: NYTimes.com Article: Slow Return as Hub for Aviation > This article from NYTimes.com > has been sent to you by psa188@juno.com. > <snip> > > Preservationists are by now inured to the reality that most early > airport buildings - overrun in the utilitarian rush for more speed, > more passengers and more square footage - have been demolished, > obliterated or runwayed over through the years. > > Yet to aviation historians, they are shrines to America's first love > affair with flight, and many are improbably historic. <snip> The terminal building at Port Columbus, CMH, from which I took my first flight in a TWA DC2 in 1938m, is still standing along 5th Avenue, close to the railroad tracks which carried the Pennsylvania Railroad train "Spirit of St.Louis", on part of the first transcontinental air-rail journey. It has a little tower on top of it. It has obviously been used as some kind of an office building in recent years. It looked vacant the last time I passed it. I have not been in it since it ceased being used as an air terminal, so I do not know how much of the (probably Art Deco) interior as a terminal survives. The service used a train from New York and continued on plane, Ford or Fokker tri-motor, to Kansas. Gerry K8EF http://home.columbus.rr.com/gfoley/ http://www.geocities.com/gerryf.geo/eclipseindex.html http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/pollock/263/egypt/egypt.html