F-15 Eagle with the American Air Museum behind. From the late 1970s onward, the museum acquired several important American aircraft; examples include a
B-17G Flying Fortress in 1978, a
B-29 Superfortress named ''It's Hawg Wild'' in 1980, and a
B-52 Stratofortress in 1983. With Duxford's association with the
US Army Air Forces (USAAF), in the mid-1980s plans developed for a commemoration of the role of American air power in the
Second World War. A group of American supporters was formed, and the architect
Norman Foster was commissioned to design a new building. Fundraising for the project began in 1987, support and funds being sought in the United States; the Founding Member was General
Jimmy Doolittle in 1989. Fundraising events were held across the US in Houston (1989),
Washington, D.C., (1991) and Los Angeles (1992). The project was widely supported in the United States by some 50,000 individual subscribers. A further $1 million of funding was secured from
Saudi Arabia, and £6.5 million from the
Heritage Lottery Fund. On 8 September 1995 the
groundbreaking for the new building was performed by wartime 78th Fighter Group veteran, Major James E Stokes.
Architecture and construction The American Air Museum was designed by Norman Foster and
Chris Wise at
Arup. The museum's specification called for a landmark building that would provide a neutral backdrop for the aircraft collection and provide appropriate climatic controls while being cost efficient to operate. The building is shaped as a section of a
torus, formed from a curved
concrete roof wide, high and deep. The dimensions of the building were dictated by the need to accommodate the museum's B-52 Stratofortress bomber with its wingspan and a tail high. The roof was constructed as a double-layered concrete
shell, built in 924 precast
reinforced concrete sections. Inverted T-shaped sections provided the inner layer with further flat panels forming the outer layer. The roof weighs and is able to support suspended aircraft weighing up to . A glass wall, demountable to permit aircraft to be rearranged, allows in daylight, thereby reducing lighting costs and enabling the aircraft to be seen from outside the building. It also allows visitors inside the museum to watch aircraft landing or taking off. From a visitor's perspective, the pedestrian entrance leads to a mezzanine floor level with the cockpit of the museum's B-52, while the lack of supporting columns allows aircraft to hang from the ceiling. Heavier aircraft stand on the floor of the building, which covers . The construction work, which was undertaken by
Sisk Group, began with the building of
abutments in October 1995 and the roof was completed in September 1996. The building won the 1998
Stirling Prize for
Foster and Partners and was described by the judges as "a great big, clear span hangar of a building...dramatic, awe-inspiring, an object of beauty...simple yet replete with imagery."
Opening and re-dedication , left foreground,
B-52 cockpit, right foreground, and
SPAD S.XIII,
PT-17 and
A-10 Thunderbolt II, suspended above. The American Air Museum was opened by
Queen Elizabeth II on 1 August 1997. The total cost of the project had been £13.5 million. and
Consolidated B-24 Liberator. The SR-71, serial number 61-7962, is the only example of its type on display outside the United States, and set a
flight altitude record of 85,069 feet (25,929m) in July 1976. Besides the Blackbird, nineteen other American aircraft are on display. Notable examples include a
C-47 Skytrain which flew with the
316th Troop Carrier Group and participated in three major Second World War airborne operations; the June 1944
Normandy landings,
Operation Market Garden and
Operation Varsity, the airborne crossing of the
River Rhine in March 1945. The museum's B-29 flew during the
Korean War as part of the
7th Bomb Wing; it is the only example in Europe and one of only two preserved in museums outside the United States. The B-52 flew 200 sorties during the
Vietnam War as part of the
28th Bomb Wing. The
General Dynamics F-111 on display flew 19 missions during the 1991 Gulf War as part of the
77th Fighter Squadron. On 17 January 2014 the museum announced an award of £980,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund. The museum planned to use the money to build a website based on the photographic collection of aviation historian
Roger Freeman, to update the museum's interpretation, and to conserve aircraft and other exhibits. The museum launched
americanairmuseum.com in October 2014. The website seeks to
crowdsource photographs and information from the public about the men and women of the US Army Air Forces who served from the UK in the Second World War and the British people who befriended them. ==Land Warfare Hall==