63
The Pan Am Terminal
at Idlewild/Kennedy Airport
and the Transition from Jet Age
to Space Age
Thomas Leslie
“L’avion accuse ...”
—Le Corbusier, Aircraft, 1935
The aircraft’s “indictment” of architecture continues to the pres-
ent day, its warping of perceptual space and time having altered
our conceptions of global, urban, and architectural environments.
Architects, while inspired by the scale and technological intensity
of the aircraft, rarely have risen to its challenge, and it is uncommon
to find an air terminal that enhances, rather than diminishes, the
experience of travel.
1
Yet terminal buildings continue to be seen by
airlines as opportunities for positioning and branding, since they
are the only permanent fixtures on the airport skyline—along with
hangars at the edge of an airport—to which their logos are affixed.
There is a long history of “flagship” terminal buildings that attempt
to crystallize the imagery and experience of a particular airline, and
to celebrate the technology and speed of its aircraft. Terminal build-
ings thus are convenient sources of cultural archeology because the
mode of their obsolescence gives us glimpses of the relationships
between corporate and popular culture, technology and style, and
our vehicles and the cities they inhabit or transgress.
Nowhere is this palimpsest of aviation and architecture more
suggestive than at New York’s Kennedy Airport, where an “ency-
clopedic” collection of terminal structures was built between 1955
and 1975. While often successful in achieving a measure of popular
acclaim, all of the original terminals have either undergone major
reconstruction as the requirements of air travel have changed, or
been demolished to make way for a more contemporary interven-
tion. The earliest of these radical transformations occurred at the
Pan American terminal, built from 1957–1960, and modified only
eight years later from 1968–1973. The original terminal, an elliptical
concrete parasol with a crystalline set of passenger spaces beneath,
had been an icon of jet-age travel, and was the centerpiece of a larger
campaign by the airline to present itself as the most sophisticated
and technologically progressive travel company in the world. Yet
the changing exigencies of airline operations in the “jumbo jet” era
forced Pan Am to replace the terminal with a labyrinthine complex of
1 See, for example, Norman Foster’s paean
to the 747 in Ruth Rosenthal and Maggie
Toy, Building Sights (London: Academy
Editions, 1995).
© 2005 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Design Issues: Volume 21, Number 1 Winter 2005