Monday, July 8, 2013

Mercedes to move into iconic Boeing plant in Long Beach

LONG BEACH - Seven years after Boeing Co. shuttered its 717 plant, a luxury automaker will take over the former commercial aircraft manufacturing facility in East Long Beach.
 
Mercedes-Benz USA has leased nearly 1.1 million square feet at the former Boeing 717 plant at 4501 East Conant St. in a long-term contract with landlord SARES-REGIS Group and Institutional Partner, according to CBRE, a commercial real estate firm.
 
CBRE's John Schumacher and Brian DeRevere represented the landlord in the transaction and announced the news Monday.
 
"This is the largest infill industrial lease in the Los Angeles area in more than 25 years - to be able to replicate this kind of opportunity would be virtually impossible," Schumacher said in a statement.
 
"There simply is no way to aggregate a +/- 50-acre site within the infill area of Los Angeles, let alone in such close proximity to the port of Long Beach. It's unlikely that we'll see another opportunity for a contiguous parcel with these kinds of improvements within a 20-mile radius of the ports in the foreseeable future."
 
Closed in 2006 after commercial aircraft manufacturing ceased there, the 717 site attracted various businesses, including a movie studio that never materialized and Tesla Motors, who considered it a home for manufacturing its Model S sedans in 2010.
 
No word yet on what will be done with the iconic neon "Fly DC Jets" sign still on its rooftop.

SARES-REGIS Group and an Institutional Partner acquired in several phases the building across the street from the 260-acre mixed-use development known as Pacific Pointe at Douglas Park, including a 52-acre 717 site at Lakewood Boulevard and Conant Street across from the airport.
 
The development includes plans for a future 26-acre retail project, a 50-acre office development and +/- 750,000 square feet of high-end industrial development, according to CBRE.
 
(Press Telegram - Karen Robes Meeks)

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

B-17 Video

B-17 'Memphis Belle' vintage aircraft flies into Long Beach for anniversary

LONG BEACH -- Laurence Stevens was a 19-year-old B-17 tail gunner, dozing off above Brux, Czechoslovakia, in 1944 when a jolt snapped him alert.

Dozens of white parachute canopies were blossoming in the freezing stratosphere as B-17s began plummeting toward the ground.

Above him, combat box formations of B-17 "Flying Fortresses" - named for their bristling defensive .50-caliber machine guns - were being swarmed by Luftwaffe fighters.

"When I pressed my face against the Plexiglas I saw German planes swirling around the higher groups," said Stevens, now 88. "It looked like a beehive of activity. "

An enemy fighter, belching smoke and flames, dropped past Stevens' crew position close enough to see the pilot before the aircraft continued a long descent into the earth.

"It looked like a movie," Stevens said. "It didn't look real. "

Though those desperate times belong to a passing generation, Southern California residents can get a visceral connection to the airmen of the Eighth Air Force on Saturday at the Long Beach Daugherty Field Airport by touring or even flying in the Liberty Foundation's B-17 "Memphis Belle," used in the 1990 movie with the same name.

The bomber is making its first West Coast tour in honor of the 70th anniversary of its namesake plane's crew completing their 25th and final mission in May 1943.

Stevens, a Temple City resident and 35-mission veteran, stepped back into his past on Monday when he climbed back on board for a B-17 flight. Until another flight earlier this year, Stevens had not been on a B-17 since the war.

Conditions were definitely different for this flight compared to then.
Instead of cruising above 25,000 feet in temperatures around 50 degrees below zero for as many as 11 hours, Stevens' flight was only a leg around Long Beach its port. The temperature was a milk-warm 70 degrees.

The venerable B-17 carried its passengers - sightseers and one former airman - with gusto, leaping off the Daugherty Field runway, the droning engines breaking into a teeth-rattling, penetrating roar as the pilots throttled up for takeoff.

After 30 minutes, Stevens was backing carefully out of a door behind the B-17's waist gunner position.

"Not as easy as I used to do that," he said with a chuckle.

During World War II, 12,731 B-17s were built. Only 12 survive today, according to Liberty Foundation lead pilot Ray Fowler of Carrollton, Ga.

He said the rarity of the workhorse bomber of the battle against Nazi Germany, along with the reality of operating costs that reach $1,400 for fuel alone, makes it more important than ever for people to come out and support the memory of the men who helped liberate Europe almost 70 years ago.

"We tell everyone the history of what they did," Fowler said. "The only way we survive is off donations and the goodwill of the public so we can see this aircraft fly and not parked as a museum piece."

(Eric Bradley - Press telegram)

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Frontier E-190 at LGB for Laughlin charter

Harrah's Casino in Laughlin, NV has decided to go with Frontier Airlines to run
their charter flights instead of Allegiant Airlines. A couple of reasons for this is:
 
1. Frontier could do it at a lower cost than Allegiant
2. Frontier will use the 99 seat Embraer E-190 which has less seats
and is cheaper to operate than Allegiants 150 seat MD-80's.
 
Below is a photo of N176HQ (c/n 19000461) getting
ready to depart to Laughlin in January. 
 
 
(Photo by Stephen Tornblom)