The Airport That Wouldn’t Die
An embattled Florida field had more than history on its side.
- By Carl Posey
- Photographs by Mike Ramos
- Air & Space magazine, August 2009
In 2003, Steve Lange (left) chaired a sign-waving group that met each Friday at a different intersection in the city.
Dirk Shadd/St. Petersburg Times
From a long final for Runway 6-24, Albert Whitted Airport looks like an aircraft carrier on the glittering blue of Tampa Bay, neatly berthed alongside the modest skyline of St. Petersburg, Florida. The field is groomed like a fairway, its aprons and tie-down areas dotted with light aircraft that, while mostly middle-aged, seem freshly minted.
For some visitors, the tableau will evoke flying in the 1970s. Older hands may picture Betty Grable debarking from a Lockheed L-10 Electra. Why? Because this is what all city airports were once like: small, tidy, fairly busy, and, most important, downtown. Whitted is one of the last of its kind, a relic of a friendlier epoch of aviation.
The best view of the field is from Randy York’s Schweizer 300C helicopter. A compact, cheerful man, York has spent much of his life flying rotary craft, including two tours in Vietnam as a gunship pilot. Buzzing with him around St. Petersburg’s high-
rises, you see how the airport and city blend seamlessly. The airport’s east-west runway flows into First Street South only a few blocks from the heart of town.
When you mention the apparent blurring of boundaries, York dusts off the mother of all airport accessibility stories. An elderly couple, lost after leaving Tampa International, finally reached what they thought was the interstate. But the “freeway” turned out to be a runway, 18-36. Apparently undaunted, they drove their rental car off the end of the pavement and into the bay, where, luckily, police were staging maritime rescue drills.
Just outside the northwest corner of the airport sits one of the city’s water treatment plants, which, when the wind is right, makes its presence known. Next to that is a Coast Guard station, and nearby, a garishly decorated floating casino called Big Easy idles.
The airport’s 110 acres may be the most valuable property in St. Petersburg, the kind of waterside property that makes developers salivate. Land like this, they say, deserves better. But others think the land was meant to be an airport, a place where citizens can hang out and watch the airplanes, largely unimpeded. It’s not just an airport, they’ll tell you, it’s our airport.
The field has been a target almost from birth. In 1935, just as the airport’s operations were starting to grow, a local investment company wanted to turn the site into wharves. As early as 1940, the powerful St. Petersburg Times began a long campaign to get rid of the airport. In 1958, the city manager tried to close the field and allow development; a local pilots’ association coalesced to defeat his plan.
In 1982, a city council committee proposed peeling off some airport property for a convention center, and giving the remaining land to the nearby University of South Florida. The full council, however, backed the airport. During the dispute, defenders of the airport asked the mayor to form an advisory committee. The mayor demurred, urging instead the creation of a private committee that the city government could not load with its pals. The result was a 12-member firewall between the airport and city politics—a key factor in future battles.
All these were mere skirmishes compared to what was coming. A year after the 2001 municipal election, St. Petersburg’s economic development director, Ron Barton, floated a plan that would close the airport altogether, devote about 60 acres to a bay-front park, and use the other 50 for an “urban, mixed-use community.” The city council rejected the idea, inflaming its proponents, who quickly banded to form the Citizens for a New Waterfront Park.
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Comments (5)
The author clearly never spoke to both sides of the airport/park controversy, describes an often empty park surrounded by asphalt in terms that don't mesh with reality and is factually incorrect when he says that "The airport people had no trouble finding their 15,000 signatures."
Nothing could be further from the truth. 'Airport people' never collected signatures: the park advocates did, in an unprecedented and months long effort that was sustained by community support. The final vote went to the airport, certainly, but the article describes none of the detail surrounding why.
The Smithsonian and by extension the house organ of the air and space museum shouldn't print such one sided and factually incorrect articles as this one.
Posted by Stephen DiCarlo on July 17,2009 | 06:27 PM
Thanks for an excellent article that summarizes the history of "our airport".
Whenever you walk around the airport on a typical Saturday, you will always find a handfull of aircraft owners who are extremely friendly and willing to put down their wrench to tell you about their aircraft and share one of their favorite aviation stories.
Posted by Dan Antrim on July 18,2009 | 08:47 AM
What a great article. This airport is a jewel of Tampa Bay. I'm not based there, but I do like to fly in and shop and eat downtown. If it were lost, I'd have one less reason to go to St. Pete.
Posted by Mike Burton on July 31,2009 | 06:38 PM
In the mid-fourty dad [C.A. WELL KNOWN AROUND ST PETE] mgr of Pelican Tire Co. would take mom and I to dinner at the Beacon across from airport. I would walk across the street and watch the planes. After a 2 dollar ride in a fairchild 24 I was hooked. US Flying Service Joe Esser,Bob Lindsey and now 35000 Hrs later still flying....
Capt TWA ret.
Col USAF ret
Corp pilot active
USCG PILOT active
Posted by Jack Selby on August 16,2009 | 10:39 AM