During the
Korean War,
Admiral Arthur W. Radford,
Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet saw the need for a naval air station at Cubi Point. It was a rugged and jungle-covered finger of land from Subic Naval Base. Radford believed the air station would be a vital link for the U.S. Navy in the Philippines. In spite of the magnitude of the job and the tremendous difficulties the construction involved, the project was approved by
The Pentagon. Civilian contractors were initially contracted to fulfill the project, but after seeing the forbidding
Zambales Mountains and the maze of jungle at Cubi Point, they claimed it could not be done. The Navy's
Seabees were then given the project in 1951. The first Seabees to arrive were MCB-3 on October 2, 1951; the second, MCB-5, arrived on November 5, 1951; the third, MCB-2 arrived early in 1952. MCBs 9 and 11 followed later. The first problem encountered was moving the fishing village of Banicain, which occupied a portion of the site for the new airfield. The town and its residents were moved to
Olongapo, which became New Banicain. The former village of Banicain is now under of earth. The next, and biggest, issue was cutting a mountain in half and moving soil to fill in Subic Bay and create a runway. The Seabees blasted
coral to fill a section of
Subic Bay, filled
swampland, removed trees as large as tall and in diameter. It was one of the largest earthmoving projects in the world, equivalent to the construction of the
Panama Canal. The construction project took five years and an estimated 20 million
man-hours. The $100-million facility (equivalent to $ million in ) was commissioned on July 25, 1956, and comprised an air station and an adjacent pier that was capable of docking the Navy's largest carriers. On December 21, 1972, Naval Air Station Cubi Point was renamed to honor Admiral
Arthur W. Radford. Radford had the unusual honor of personally dedicating the facility. A plaque memorializing the occasion reads: == Operations ==