Kansas City Overhaul Base
The Kansas City Overhaul Base is a 1.7-million-square-foot (160,000 m2) manufacturing and maintenance plant adjacent to Kansas City International Airport.
The plant at its peak in the 1960s and 1970s employed more than 6,000 people who worked on repairing the entire fleet of Trans World Airlines (and other airlines under contract) and it was Kansas City's biggest employer. Since TWA's successor American Airlines began downsizing in preparation for a total abandonment effective September 2010, three companies moved their headquarters and plants into the complex (Smith Electric Vehicles (US), Jet Midwest and Nordic Windpower). Frontier Airlines leased two narrow-body hangars.
The plant along with the airport opened in 1957 at a cost of $25 million and was marked an attempt to keep TWA in Kansas City following the Great Flood of 1951 which had destroyed TWA's facilities at Fairfax Airport close to the Missouri River. TWA's plant had been in the former North American Aviation B-25 Mitchell bomber plant at Fairfax. TWA labeled the building MCIE (after the airport's original name of Mid-Continent International Airport).[1] The airline also moved its large overhaul operations at the New Castle County Airport in Delaware to Kansas City.[2]
In 1973, when the airport opened to replace Kansas City Downtown Airport as the city's main airport, TWA also added its distinctive sloped wide-body hangars.[1]
When American Airlines acquired financially bankrupt TWA in 2001, TWA had 2,600 employees at the base.[3]
In 2008, American moved about 500 of its remaining 1,000 employees to Tulsa, Oklahoma and American formally cut the ties in September 2010. Barack Obama visited the Smith Electric part of the plant to tout the $32 million in stimulus funding granted to Smith to locate to the structure.
Kansas City says that 1 million feet (300,000 m) have been leased.
In 2009, Kansas City broke ground on the KCI Intermodal Center, Kansas City SmartPort foreign trade zone on 800 acres (320 ha) across Runway 9/27 directly south of the plant being developed by Trammell Crow Company.[4]
References
- "TWA Skyliner" (PDF). Transport Workers Union of America. September 2010.
- "Delawareans Helped To Pioneer Flying; 50th Anniversary To Be Observed Here". Wilmington Sunday Star. December 13, 1953. Retrieved 2016-03-17.
- Heaster, Randolph (September 24, 2010). "'Sad day' as workers leave Kansas City aircraft overhaul base". Columbia Missourian. Retrieved 2016-03-17.
- "Ground broken for KCI business center". The Landmark. Platte County, Missouri. October 17, 2008. Retrieved 2016-03-17.