TWA Hotel Opens at JFK
John Hill
23. 五月 2019
All photographs by John Hill/World-Architects
Five decades after it first opened to the public, and 18 years after it closed, Eero Saarinen's TWA Flight Center at JFK Airport in New York City has reopened as the TWA Hotel.
The bird-like form Eero Saarinen designed for the TWA Flight Center became a symbol of aviation when it opened in 1962, one year after the architect unexpectedly died at the age of 51. But as Richard Southwick of Beyer Blinder Belle (BBB), the project and preservation architect for the building's restoration, explained to a group of press assembled one week after the TWA Hotel's opening on May 15, 2019, the design's inflexibility made it obsolete not long after completion. At the time, supersonic jets like the Concorde, which seated around 100 passengers, were seen as the future, not wide-body jets that can accommodate four times as many flyers.
TWA added extensions over the years to make the terminal work with larger planes and additional passengers, but the inevitable happened in 2001, when the airline ceased operations inside the building and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates New York City's three airports, "essentially mothballed" the building, per BBB. The TWA Flight Center was in use for nearly 40 years, after which the future of Saarinen's masterpiece was uncertain.
BBB worked on the restoration of the building and its documentation for landmark status following its 2001 closure, but the aviation icon required a new use to ensure its longevity. Following an aborted attempt earlier this decade at redeveloping the building as a hotel, MCR/Morse Development put together a successful proposal to transform the TWA Flight Center into a lobby for a 512-room hotel flanking the building and a conference and event space tucked beneath the "tarmac" behind the original building. A handful of firms are responsible for the transformation of the TWA Flight Center into the nearly 400,000-square-foot TWA Hotel:
- Project and Preservation Architect: Beyer Blinder Belle Architects & Planners
- Design Consultant and Design Architect for Hotel Buildings: Lubrano Ciavarra Architects
- Conference and Event Space Interior Design: INC Architecture & Design
- Hotel Room and Select Public Area Interior Design: Stonehill Taylor
- Landscape Architect: Mathews Nielsen
Below the floor plans, provided for purposes of orientation, is a photo tour through the old and new buildings from this week's press gathering that World-Architects attended.