38°52′N 77°03′W / 38.87°N 77.05°W
Washington Airport | |
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Summary | |
Owner | Funkhouser, Fahy, et al. (late 1927-February 1928) Seaboard Airways (February 1928-June 1928) United States Air Transport (June 1928-March 1929) Atlantic Seaboard Airways (March 1929-June 1929) Federal Aviation Corporation (June 1929-July 17, 1993) National Aviation Corp (July 17, 1933-August 2, 1933) |
Serves | Washington Metropolitan Area |
Location | Arlington County, Virginia |
Washington Airport was the second major airport to serve the city of Washington, D.C., in the United States. Located in Arlington, Virginia, near the intersection of the Highway Bridge and the Mount Vernon Parkway (in a site now occupied by The Pentagon's south parking lots, Metrobus bus bays, and a portion of Interstate-395 highway).[1] The first airport to serve the city was Hoover Field, a private airfield constructed in 1925. Washington Airport, a private airport triple the size of Hoover Field, was built literally across the road in late 1927. The airfield suffered from short and unpaved runways, numerous life-threatening obstructions around the field, poor visibility due to a burning garbage dump adjacent to each field, and poor drainage. Washington Airport nearly went bankrupt in 1933, and it was auctioned off to the owner of Hoover Field, who merged the two into a single airfield, Washington-Hoover Airport.
Washington-Hoover Airport closed in 1941 when replacement facility Washington National Airport (now Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport) was opened.