flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

JFK’s TWA Flight Center has been reimagined as a hotel

Hotel Facilities

JFK’s TWA Flight Center has been reimagined as a hotel

MCR and Morse Development spearheaded the project.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | May 16, 2019

Courtesy TWA Hotel

The TWA Flight Center at JFK Airport, originally designed by Finnish architect Eero Saarinen in 1962, has recently completed its conversion into a 512-room hotel.

The hotel features restaurants, bars, and retail outlets housed inside the 200,000 sf former flight center. The hotel rooms are included in two hotel wings that sit behind the historic building and offer views of JFK’s runways.

 

See Also: This Marriott is poised to take over the title as the world’s tallest modular hotel

 

Also included in the renovated Flight Center is 50,000 sf of meeting and event space that can host up to 1,600 people, a rooftop infinity pool, a Lockheed Constellation L-1649A that has been transformed into a cocktail lounge, and a 10,000-sf fitness center, which the developers claim is the largest hotel gym in the world. Museum exhibitions on TWA, the Jet Age, and the midcentury modern design movement are available for guests to explore.

Because of its proximity to a busy airport, the design team needed to pay special attention to sound. Cerami Associates led the acoustic modeling and simulation process for the hotel. The firm began by establishing acoustic performance criteria by recording and measuring noise levels (from things such as traffic and jets taxiing and taking off) at various locations, including the rooftop. Cerami then compiled the data and made the acoustic projections for the guest rooms tangible through simulation. This allowed the TWA project team to experience a modeled guest room sound experience and choose the best option for achieving the quiet they were looking for. The result is a hotel that the team says is one of the world's quietest.

The hotel is the only on-airport, AirTrain-accessible hotel at JFK and is connected to JFK’s Terminal 5 via Saarinen’s flight tubes (as seen in the 2002 movie Catch Me If You Can).

 

1. Flight tubes to JetBlue Terminal 5

2. Hotel guestrooms

3. 50,000 sf event and conference center

4. 200,000 sf heart of the hotel with restaurants, bars, and retail

5. 10,000 sf fitness center

6. AirTrain to JFK

7. 4,000 parking spaces

Related Stories

| Feb 15, 2013

Hotel project pipeline up 5% in January

The number of hotel rooms in the construction or planning phases rose 4.9% in January compared with year-ago stats. Rooms actually under construction increased 38.3% compared with January 2012. 

| Feb 5, 2013

5 forces driving hotel investment

Jones Lang LaSalle’s Hotels & Hospitality Group believes that signs point to an on-going uptick in Americas hotel transactions activity sooner rather than later. They identify the five forces that will drive the hotel investment market during the next five years.

| Jan 16, 2013

SOM’s innovative Zhengzhou Greenland Plaza opens

The 2.59-million-square-feet building houses a mixed-use program of offices on its lower floors and a 416-room hotel.

| Nov 11, 2012

Greenbuild 2012 Report: Hospitality

Hotel boom signals good news for greener lodging facilities

| Oct 5, 2012

2012 Reconstruction Award Silver Winner: Residences at the John Marshall, Richmond, Va.

In April 2010, the Building Team of Rule Joy Trammell + Rubio, Stanley D. Lindsey & Associates, Leppard Johnson & Associates, and Choate Interior Construction restored the 16-story, 310,537-sf building into the Residences at the John Marshall, a new mixed-use facility offering apartments, street-level retail, a catering kitchen, and two restored ballrooms.

| Jul 20, 2012

2012 Giants 300 Special Report

Ranking the leading firms in Architecture, Engineering, and Construction.

| Jul 20, 2012

Global boom for hotels; for retail, not so much

The Giants 300 Top 10 Firms in the Hospitality and Retail sectors.

| Jul 17, 2012

KM/Plaza changes name to Plaza Construction

Lands new projects including the Perry South Beach Hotel and Dadeland Mall Kendall Wing Expansion.

| Jun 25, 2012

Living green wall planned for InterContinental Chicago

Project, with price tag of $2 million to $3 million, needs council approval.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021