For et par dager siden skrev jeg om tilsvarende hangar på NAS Moffett. Den er verdt å ta vare på nå som det blir færre av disse enorme byggverkene. Artikkelen under gir et visst innblikk i historien, (Red.)
Firefighters battle blaze at historic former
Marine Corps hangar in Southern California
By
GARY WARNER
STARS AND STRIPES • November
7, 2023
Orange
County, Calif., firefighters battle a fire at the historic north hangar at the
former Marine Corps Air Station Tustin on Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2023. (Mark
Rightmire, Orange County Register/TNS)
One of two former
blimp hangars once used by the Marine Corps that have been landmarks in Southern
California since World War II caught fire Tuesday, and firefighters battling
the blaze were ordered to withdraw and wait for the structure to collapse,
according to local fire officials.
“Due to the
dynamic nature of the fire, and the imminent danger of collapse, we have
determined the most operationally sound method is to allow the structure to
collapse, at which point ground crews can move in closer and aggressively work
to extinguish the fire,” the Orange County Fire Authority posted
on its website.
The north hangar
at the former Marine Corps Air Station Tustin, which is about 40 miles
southwest of Los Angeles, caught fire at about 1 a.m. Tuesday, county fire
chief Brian Fennessy said at a news briefing. He said no one was believed to be
in the building at the time of the fire and there were no reported injuries.
The adjacent south hangar was undamaged.
Each of the
300,000 square-foot buildings is constructed primarily of 1 million feet of
Douglas fir lumber from Oregon. They are among the largest free-standing wooden
structures in the world, according to the National Trust for Historic
Preservation.
The north hangar —
also known as hangar 1 — was fully engulfed in the fire. The three-alarm fire
led to more than 70 firefighters and 16 firefighting vehicles from across
Southern California responding to flames that lit up the pre-dawn sky in
central Orange County, home to 3.7 million residents. Initial efforts to stop
the fire included water-dumping CH-47 Chinook helicopters usually used to
battle wildfires.
An
aerial view of the historic hangars of the former Marine Corps Air Station
Tustin. (Tustin Area Historical Society)
The hangar had
ceased military function nearly 25 years ago when the Marines moved out. It was
used as a film location and for storage in later decades but was completely
shuttered following a 2013 windstorm that weakened the roof.
The possible
instability of the structure, open area around the hangar and the absence of
any contents of value contributed to the decision to withdraw personnel and
wait for outcome of the blaze, fire officials said.
“The biggest fear
is collapse and getting our firefighters injured,” county Fire Authority Capt.
Thanh Nguyen said in a statement.
At 17-stories
tall, with a length of about 1,088 feet and width of just less than 300 feet,
the blimp hangars were landmarks for generations of Southern California,
looming just off Interstate 5 in Orange County and next to John Wayne Airport.
The two all-wood
hangars were rapidly built following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in
1941 to house 12 K-class blimps built by the Goodyear Co. of Akron, Ohio. Each
blimp could cruise at just less than 60 mph for more than 38 hours with a range
of 2,025 miles.
The installation
was originally commissioned in October 1942 as the Santa Ana Lighter-Than-Air
Base. It later became the Santa Ana Naval Air Station.
The Navy blimps
carrying a crew of up to 10 patrolled the California coastline during World War
II looking for possible Japanese attackers. They were armed with .50 caliber machine
guns and four 350-pound depth charges.
Blimp
hangar at the former Marine Corps Air Station Tustin in Tustin, Calif. (Tustin
Area Historical Society)
The Tustin blimp
base was decommissioned in 1949. The hangars were used for various purposes,
including the storage of civilian aircraft in what was dubbed “Hangar City.”
The hangars and
surrounding airfield were recommissioned as Marine Corps Air Facility Santa Ana
in 1951. A hub of rotary aircraft training for the Marine Corps during the
Vietnam War. It was renamed the Marine Corps Air Station Santa Ana in 1966. The
name was changed again in 1979 to Marine Corps Air Station Tustin in
recognition of the growing city adjacent to the base.
The hangars were
used to store helicopters of squadrons attached to the 3rd Marine Aircraft
Wing. The fixed-wing aircraft of the wing were based at the nearby Marine Corps
Air Station El Toro.
As late as the
1980s, MCAS Tustin was home to 5,000 Marines and their families.
A
blimp at the former Marine Corps Air Station Tustin in Tustin, Calif. (Tustin
Area Historical Society)
Squadrons from
MCAS Tustin took part in Operation Desert Storm in 1991, with helicopters
carried as cargo from the nearby El Toro base in C-5 Galaxy transports for
deployment in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, prior to the assaults on Iraqi-occupied
Kuwait.
In 1975, both
hangars were listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
In 1991 and 1993,
under the authority of the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Act of 1990,
the Tustin and El Toro bases were ordered closed.
The Marines left
MCAS Tustin, and the hangars were decommissioned in July 1999. Most of the
aircraft were moved to Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in nearby northern San
Diego County. Prior to the BRAC decisions, Miramar had served as a Naval Air
Station. Other aircraft were dispersed to North Island Naval Air Station in San
Diego.
All but 308 acres
of the 1,600-acre Tustin base were conveyed to local authorities, developers
and public agencies. The land has been developed into homes, businesses and
recreational areas.
Plans called for
the south hangar, also known as hangar 2, to be incorporated into the parks and
a possible military museum. The north hanger, which caught on fire Tuesday, was
scheduled for eventual removal. It has been used by film productions and as
various kind of storage in the years since the base closure.
The
combined crews in front of the blimp hangar at the former Marine Corps Air
Station Tustin. (Tustin Area Historical Society)
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