Steel construction Sheds built for rigid airships survive at
Moffett Field, California;
Akron, Ohio;
Weeksville, North Carolina;
Lakehurst, New Jersey;
Santa Cruz Air Force Base in Brazil; and
Cardington, Bedfordshire. Steel rigid airship hangars are some of the largest in the world. Hangar 1, Lakehurst, is located at
Naval Air Engineering Station Lakehurst (formerly Naval Air Station Lakehurst), New Jersey. The structure was completed in 1921 and is typical of airship hangar designs of World War I. The site is best known for the
Hindenburg disaster, when on May 6, 1937, the German airship
Hindenburg crashed and burned while landing. Hangar No.1 at Lakehurst was used to build and store the American
USS Shenandoah. The hangar also provided service and storage for the airships USS
Los Angeles,
Akron,
Macon, as well as the
Graf Zeppelin and the
Hindenburg. The largest hangars ever built include the
Goodyear Airdock measuring 1,175x325x211 feet and
Hangar One (Mountain View, California) measuring . The
Goodyear Airdock, is in Akron, Ohio and the structure was completed on November 25, 1929. The Airdock was used for the construction of the USS
Akron and her sister ship, the USS
Macon.
Hangar One at
Moffett Federal Field (formerly
Naval Air Station Moffett Field), is located in
Mountain View, California. The structure was completed in 1931. It housed the USS
Macon.
Wood construction -filled blimps stored in one of the two hangars at the former US
Marine Corps Air Station Tustin The
U.S. Navy established
more airship operations during WWII. As part of this, ten "lighter-than-air" (LTA) bases across the United States were built as part of the coastal defence plan; a total of 17 hangars were built. Hangars at these bases are some of the world's largest freestanding timber structures. Bases with wooden hangars included: the Naval Air Stations at
South Weymouth, Massachusetts (1 hangar); Lakehurst, New Jersey (2); Weeksville, North Carolina (1); Glynco, Georgia (2); Richmond, Florida (3); Houma, Louisiana (1); Hitchcock, Texas (1);
Tustin (Santa Ana), California (2); Moffett Field, California (2) and Tillamook, Oregon (2). Of the seventeen, only seven remain,
Moffett Federal Field, (former NAS Moffett Field), California (2); former
Tustin, California (former NAS Santa Ana and MCAS Tustin), California (2);
Tillamook Air Museum/
Tillamook Airport (former NAS Tillamook), Oregon (1) and
Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst/Naval Support Activity Lakehurst (former NAS Lakehurst), New Jersey (2).
Fabric construction A hangar for Cargolifter was built at
Brand-Briesen Airfield long, wide and high and is a free standing steel-dome "barrel-bowl" construction large enough to fit the
Eiffel Tower on its side. The company went into
insolvency and in June 2003, the facilities were sold off and the
airship hangar was converted to a 'tropical paradise'-themed indoor holiday resort called
Tropical Islands, which opened in 2004. An alternative to the fixed hangar is a portable shelter that can be used for aircraft storage and maintenance. Portable
fabric structures can be built up to wide, high and any length. They are able to accommodate several aircraft and can be increased in size and even relocated when necessary. == Structures and sizes ==