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Historic JFK terminal gets new life as luxury hotel

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Video courtesy Associated Press
The famous winged TWA terminal at New York's John F. Kennedy Airport came out of its decades-long retirement today with a new life as a luxury hotel.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS

The TWA terminal at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport comes out of retirement to open as a hotel today. The Finnish architect Eero Saarinen didn’t have a hotel in mind when he designed the futuristic structure that opened in 1962. The AirTrain, which links terminals to the subway system, passes in front of the hotel.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

The TWA terminal at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport comes out of retirement to open as a hotel today.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Visitors arrive in the main lobby of the TWA Hotel at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport today.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

A room at the TWA Hotel at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport has a view of the Eero Saarinen-designed terminal.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

People meet in the Paris Cafe during the opening of the TWA Hotel at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport today.

NEW YORK >> The famous winged TWA terminal at New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport came out of its decades-long retirement today with a new life as a luxury hotel.

“How beautiful is this?” said Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who was on hand for a ribbon cutting ceremony opening the $268 million project.

The Finnish architect Eero Saarinen didn’t have a hotel in mind when he designed the futuristic structure that opened in 1962.

Those were the heady jet-age days of the first space flights and President John F. Kennedy’s promise of a moon landing.

Now, developer Tyler Morse hopes the proximity to the tarmac will draw travelers who don’t want to fight nightmarish city traffic to catch their flights.

Guests will pay about $250 a night for that privilege in 512 rooms with noise-dampening windows adjacent to JFK’s Terminal 5.

For longer layovers, the hotel has six restaurants, including one operated by chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten. One of its eight bars is housed inside a vintage TWA aircraft Morse said was once purchased and used by South American drug dealers.

The hotel also features a 10,000 square-foot observation deck with a pool.

Kennedy is catching up with other international flight hubs that have hotels. Right now, most options are either a few budget accommodations in a few hotels in a neighborhood near the airport, or a very long train or cab ride all the way into the city center.

New York’s aging airport, which is itself undergoing a $13 billion renovation, was home to TWA until the airline went out of business in 2001 and was absorbed by American Airlines.

A lone TWA sign still marks its winged, white former terminal that remains a bold, elegant example of mid-20th century design.

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