Historic KCMH Terminal To Be Restored For Learning Center

Increase font  Decrease font Release Date:2020-11-02  Views:1495
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In 1928, Charles Lindbergh personally selected Port Columbus Airport in Columbus, Ohio, as the eastern terminus of Transcontinental Air Transport (TAT), one of America’s first commercial airlines and the first to offer coast-to-coast service. In July 1929, a beautiful art deco and modern (for the era) terminal was opened to the public at what is today known as John Glenn Columbus International Airport (KCMH) to service TAT passengers.

With Ohio widely recognized as the birthplace of aviation, the core mission of the recently-established 501(c)(3) nonprofit Ohio Air & Space Hall of Fame and Museum (OAS) is to preserve and publicly honor the remarkable legacies of the state’s outstanding air and space pioneers. This roster of honorees will include legendary names like the Wright Brothers, Eddie Rickenbacker, Neil Armstrong, and John Glenn, but also under-heralded but no less significant trailblazers like Jerrie Mock, the first woman to fly solo around the world. OAS plans to leverage such inspirational examples as educational tools, using them as the foundation for fostering future innovation and workforce development through its STEAM education programs.

The old terminal building at KCMH has seen efforts to restore it over the years but has been vacant for nearly fifteen years despite being on the National Register of Historic Places. That is all about to change thanks to OAS, who announced last week that it has signed a long-term lease with the Columbus Regional Airport Authority (CRAA) for the original 1929 Port Columbus air terminal and tower.

The State of Ohio has appropriated a $550,000 grant toward OAS’s estimated $2 million cost of renovating the 12,000 square-foot-plus air terminal, with OAS havin an initial goal of raising another $550,000 to double the matching funds required by the state to release the grant.

once the building’s three stories and control tower are renovated, the air terminal and surrounding 1.7 acres will be a “civic showpiece” according to Ron Kaplan, OAS executive director. With its interior configured as the home of the OAS when it opens in late 2021, OAS will offer free-to-the-public exhibits honoring Ohio’s air and space pioneers, house research archives, and their STEAM education center, and offer rentable meeting and event spaces.

“As a native of Columbus,” Kaplan said, “I had a fair amount of personal history with the original Port Columbus air terminal and certainly was aware of its significance. I recall my dad–a pilot–taking us to see the Ford Tri-Motor on hand for the 40th Anniversary of Port Columbus in 1969 when I was just 11. Later, as a more devoted student of aviation history, I better understood Port Columbus’s significance in the history of passenger travel.”

 
 

 
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