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
(Page 5 of 6)
Randy York’s office is in another corner of Hangar One. “I’ve been here since August 1978,” he says. “I got my flight school approved in ’78, set up at Bay Air. A few months later, Van and I partnered up in the helicopter business.”
York bought the company in 1987 but continued to share Hangar One with Bay Air. “About six years ago, we had 20 helicopters from all over the world. I downsized.” West Florida Helicopters now operates four piston-powered Schweizers in Hangar One. “We do photo flights. Rebuild them for resale.”
An extension grafted onto the north side of Hangar One houses the cluttered upstairs office of airport manager Richard Lesniak, who came to Whitted after the 2003 referendum. He says revenues and rents earn the city $800,000 to $900,000 a year. Last year, the airport had 84,000 takeoffs and landings, with 185 airplanes and 300 jobs based there. “Since 2003,” Lesniak says, “the city has put about $7 million capital in the airport, another $4 million for a new control tower and taxiway improvement—$11 million in five years.”
Completed in 2007, the new terminal is named for John Galbraith, a former Marine pilot, and his wife Rosemary, a former flight attendant. Galbraith moved his investment firm to St. Petersburg because he could fly in and walk to his Bayfront Towers condo. Over the years, his philanthropic impulse pumped millions of dollars into a host of causes, including the airport.
When city playground money became available, Terri Griner, now president of the Albert Whitted Airport Preservation Society, put in a bid to create an aeronautics-theme playground by the control tower. The park, which seems to be always full of children, has a jungle gym modeled on the medevac helicopters that fly from the airport, swings with a blimp motif, and miniature airplanes on spring stands.
The Albert Whitted Airfest, Inc., an annual airshow, earned a small profit in 2006. But in 2007 it lost money, so last year’s show was canceled. The next St. Petersburg Airfest is set for October 23 to 25.
The preservation society has about 30 unpaid volunteers, including Griner, and a pool of perhaps 100 more for special projects. Pancake breakfasts are offered the first Saturday of every month, in tents set up outside the group’s headquarters. “We market the airport,” Griner explains. “We hand out welcome bags in the terminal, with city maps and so forth. We provide all the tours.” They also got Hangar One named an historic landmark, putting another obstacle in the way of those who would try to close the airport.
The most interesting airplane at Albert Whitted may be the red WACO UIC biplane in Tom Hurley’s hangar. This is his second WACO; its predecessor was an open-cockpit UPF-7. The UIC’s enclosed cabin attracts people who want to fly in an old biplane, but don’t want to be blown around.
Hurley is a big, sometimes gruff man whose hands are scarred and stained from the labor of keeping NC13562 flying. Today, he is putting it back together after the annual inspection. Hurley takes people out for hops of various magnitudes, flying low enough for passengers to get biplane experience and for people on the ground to read the big “BIPLANE RIDES” painted on the lower wing’s underside.
Keeping an airport like Albert Whitted alive is not unlike caring for a 75-year-old biplane. History suggests that for downtown airports, “forever” may really mean “for now.”
“The 2003 referendum was very convincing,” says Methot. “We’re accepting federal funds, which obligates us for 20 years. But I don’t think any airport is safe in this country. All it would take to close the airport would be a new referendum.”
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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