Grand Central Airport (California)

Also known as Grand Central Air Terminal (GCAT), the airport was an important facility for the growing Los Angeles suburb of Glendale in the 1920s and a key element in the development of United States aviation.

The terminal, located at 1310 Air Way, was built in 1928 and still exists, owned since 1997 by The Walt Disney Company as a part of its Grand Central Creative Campus (GC3).

[3] The concept for the airport probably began with Leslie Coombs Brand (1859–1925), a major figure in the settlement and economic growth of the Glendale area.

[8] GCAT became a major airport of entry to Los Angeles and provided the first paved runway west of the Rocky Mountains.

Within a year, the entire enterprise was sold to the Curtiss-Wright Flying Service,[9] managed by C. C. Moseley, a co-founder of the future Western Airlines.

It was also at Grand Central that Moseley established the first of his private flying schools, Curtiss-Wright Technical Institute (later renamed Cal-Aero Academy).

The airport was the setting of several films, including Howard Hughes' Hell's Angels (1930), Shirley Temple's Bright Eyes (1934), Lady Killer (1933) starring James Cagney, Sky Giant (1938) with Joan Fontaine, Hats Off[17] (1936) with John Payne, the musical Hollywood Hotel[18] (1937) with Dick Powell, and the adventure film Secret Service of the Air (1939) starring Ronald Reagan.

[22] The Grand Central Flying School (GCFS) started out at the airfield and evolved into the Cal-Aero Flight Academy (CAFA).

Before its closing, the airport hosted a SCCA National Sports Car Championship race on November 13, 1955, that attracted 6,000 spectators.

Additional details were released in March 2000 indicating that it would have 3,600,000 square feet (330,000 m2) in several four- to six-story buildings for office, production and sound stages and hold 10,000 employees.

[33][34][35] The campus' second phase began construction in September 2010 on a 338,000-square-foot (31,400 m2) six-story building with a five-story wing and a parking structure, hosting 1,200 employees.

[37][38] Disney units on the campus are:[39] This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

Interior of Grand Central Air Terminal building today
The Douglas DC-1 in front of the terminal
The former runway, now Grand Central Avenue
1400 Air Way in Glendale (just northwest of the old airport terminal), where several films of the Disney Renaissance were partially produced
Grand Central Creative Campus map
1101 and 1201 Flower Avenue office buildings on the Grand Central Creative Campus