Local aviation enthusiasts are setting their sights high
with a proposed renovation of the Wings of Freedom museum in Horsham, hoping
that it could someday rival the Smithsonian's Air and Space Museum.
The designs, unveiled Friday at a fund-raiser in Blue
Bell, call for a $24 million, green-certified campus to replace the existing
museum. The planes now displayed on the lawn would move inside an all-glass
exhibit hall. A circuitous, multilevel viewing path would showcase the planes
from above and below. And a separate gallery would allow visitors to watch
planes being restored.
The expansion is part of the redevelopment of the former
Willow Grove Naval Air Station, which closed in 2011 except for the museum and
a small parcel still used by the Air National Guard. The rest of the base is
slated to be turned into houses, condos, office space, shops, and parks.
"We believe it's a great cause. We want to preserve
the history of the base, and we're the only ones doing that right now,"
said Ronald Nelson, a retired Marine who heads the museum board.
Nelson said he doesn't want Willow Grove's legacy to fade
into obscurity, like that of the former Naval Air Warfare Center in Warminster.
After the Warminster base closed in 1996, its most important artifact - a
centrifuge where astronauts trained before space flights - foundered as a
commercial event space and is now closed to the public.
Currently, the Wings of Freedom museum gets about 1,000
visitors a month, Nelson said. All of the aircraft on display flew out of
Willow Grove - during the Gulf war, the Vietnam War, World War II, and even
earlier, when it was a corporate airfield founded by aviation pioneer Harold
Pitcairn.
"Pitcairn Field is the birthplace of rotary-wing
flight, which is huge," Nelson said. "Almost every helicopter flying
today has a rotor head that the basic design was done by Harold."
In its current state, the museum does not have space to
display some of its best materials, said Mark Hurwitz, vice president of the
museum board.
"There are things that we have in storage now, just
because we have limited space," he said. He recalled sorting through the
basement a few years ago and finding a black-and-white photograph.
"It was Amelia Earhart when she was in Norristown,
not long before she took her final flight," Hurwitz said. "But she
also flew out of Willow Grove, in a Pitcairn autogiro, and set an altitude
record at Willow Grove. . . . That's part of the history that is kind of very
quiet, and we need to raise that up."
The Delaware Valley Historical Aircraft Association,
which owns and operates the museum, is entirely funded by donations and run by
volunteers.
Raising the $24 million to build the facility - plus more
for upkeep and operating expenses - will be a huge hurdle. But time may be on
their side.
In addition to the usual delays over permits, water and
sewer infrastructure, and contracting, the association is still waiting for the
Navy to release the land. The local redevelopment agency buying the base has
promised the museum a 14-acre parcel, but environmental cleanup is hindering
the process.
"I hope it happens in my lifetime," Nelson
said. "I'm not sure it will, but we'll get it started anyhow."
Source: Philly.com
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