NYTimes.com Article: A New Function for a Landmark of the Jet Age

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A New Function for a Landmark of the Jet Age

October 2, 2003
 By DAVID W. DUNLAP





IN its expressively sculptural forms - roof vaults that
embraced travelers like sheltering bird wings, swooping
walkways that propelled them to waiting jetliners - Eero
Saarinen's Trans World Airlines terminal at Kennedy Airport
was meant to be a prelude to flight.

Perhaps America's most lyrical monument to the dawn of the
jet age, it has nevertheless been a dead end for two years,
its coves and bridges lacking the swirling crowds that
brought a vital fourth dimension to the Saarinen landmark.

Now a revival may be at hand for the 41-year-old building,
known as Terminal 5, which has been empty since T.W.A.
closed operations in October 2001. An aggressive young
airline, JetBlue Airways, would like to use the landmark
for a small part of its operations. That proposal appears
to have broken a longstanding impasse over whether the
building would be best preserved as a functioning terminal
or as a museum piece.

JetBlue runs 75 to 80 flights a day out of Kennedy and
wants to triple that number. It hopes to build a 26-gate
terminal behind the Saarinen building. The plan calls for
the old and new terminals to be linked by the tubular
passenger bridges that were memorably used in the 2002 film
<object.title class="Movie" idsrc="nyt_ttl"
value="124350">"Catch Me if You Can"</object.title> as the
setting of a climactic encounter between Leonardo DiCaprio
and Tom Hanks.

Though JetBlue's primary operations would be in the new
terminal, it might install electronic check-in kiosks in
the Saarinen terminal, meaning that passengers could
recreate the experience of moving through that space to
their planes, now A320's rather than 707's.

"We would like to be able to embrace the Saarinen building
and make it part of the JetBlue image," said Richard Smyth,
the vice president of redevelopment for the three-year-old
airline. The landmark, he said, could fit into JetBlue's
marketing, with its midcentury modernist feel.

However, neither JetBlue nor the Port Authority of New York
and New Jersey, which operates the airport, believe the
Saarinen building, in its entirety, can be transformed into
a modern terminal.

WHEN we first got here, we looked at Terminal 5 and said,
`Boy, this would be cool if we could use it,' " Mr. Smyth
recalled. "But we very quickly realized that it couldn't
work."

For instance, he said, there is no room for curbside
check-in, no way to move baggage efficiently through the
building and no place to put security equipment like bulky
explosive-detecting devices. And the gently arched tubular
bridges do not meet modern requirements for people with
disabilities.

William R. DeCota, director of aviation at the Port
Authority, said: "It's going to become more of an airport
centerpiece. You can't just make it a restaurant, a museum,
a conference center. But you can make it all of these
things to some extent."

Ted D. Kleiner, the authority's assistant aviation
director, also envisions travelers going to the Saarinen
building to while away weather-related or other delays, a
trip that will take no more than 10 minutes on the future
AirTrain system. The building could also serve the 50,000
people who work at Kennedy, he said.

JetBlue's willingness to consider some passenger use of the
building has earned the tentative backing of the Municipal
Art Society, which has long insisted that the only
meaningful preservation of the landmark lies in restoring
it as a fully functioning airline terminal, rather than as
a "fly in amber."

"We've made very encouraging progress in speaking with
JetBlue and the Port Authority about a solution for a new
terminal," said Frank E. Sanchis III, executive director
the society, after a meeting on Tuesday. A report of that
meeting is due tomorrow at the Federal Aviation
Administration.

Robert B. Tierney, the chairman of the New York City
Landmarks Preservation Commission, said he was "very
supportive" of the evolving plan.

And Peg Breen, president of the private New York Landmarks
Conservancy, said, "I think we're moving." The conservancy
agrees with the Port Authority that the building is better
suited for adaptive reuse. "In modern airports," she said,
"all you want to do is get through lines and get through
security."

Or, as Mr. DeCota said, "Most people are not here for
self-actualization."

But his affection for the building and its kinetic energy
was obvious during an inspection tour last week, when he
stepped behind a sinuously curving information desk. "You
can see the women in T.W.A. livery," he said.

"You do get an emotion from this building," Mr. DeCota
allowed.

Still breathtakingly luminous, but unnervingly quiet, the
Trans World Flight Center looks better today than it did in
its last years of operation, when it was filled with
unsympathetic accretions necessary for security and
baggage-handling. Among other steps, the Port Authority has
reopened the sunken waiting lounge in front of the main
window, which T.W.A. had decked over and used as a ticket
counter.

The spherical clock over the bridge that once led from the
Ambassador Club to the Lisbon Lounge and Paris Cafe, still
tells time. "It's valiantly doing its job," Mr. DeCota
said, glancing up at 11:11, "waiting for someone to see
it."

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/02/nyregion/02BLOC.html?ex=1066101147&ei=1&en=4f06c169a28d6ab1


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