Aircraft manufacturing facility innovation from The Austin Company
By The Austin Company
One hundred years ago, in 1916, The Austin Company began design and construction on its first of many aircraft assembly plants – the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company plant in Buffalo, N.Y. This was just the beginning of a long list of innovative and successfully designed and constructed complex aircraft facilities that were often completed on a fast-track basis.
Austin’s many innovations along the way contributed to the success of our clients by enabling them to operate in more efficient environments, optimize the flexibility of their operations, and meet aggressive schedules. Austin architects, engineers, and constructors devised many innovations for the aviation sector since its inception, such as bi-fold hangar doors, metal-saving fiberglass wall panels for WWII bomber plants, induced airflows to improve ventilation in large plants, rolling work platforms to speed schedules, and more.
It is a proud history. We like to say that Austin has aviation in our DNA. While Samuel Austin was our founder and established high standards of ethics, values, and quality in our work, his son Wilbert was the innovator and visionary for aviation. Tragically, Wilbert died in a plane crash in Chicago in 1940, but by then, the DNA was well established.
Austin has held a formative role in this dynamic industry: airplanes, airports, engines, hangars, flight kitchens, cargo facilities, rockets, satellites. We have created these facilities in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Italy, Australia, Greece, UK, Japan, and other locations.
In 100 years, manned flight has evolved from single engine bi-planes to supersonic travel, satellites, and space tourism. Design and construction has gone from pencils, linen, and slide rules to lasers, GPS, and integrated software platforms. Some things remain constant, however; a passion for this industry, an excitement toward how this market inspires and challenges us to innovate and achieve higher goals, and an appreciation of how this market drives us to technical excellence. This is where the DNA shows up, and it carries over into every market and industry we serve.
This historical timeline highlights some of the many aviation and aerospace projects Austin has completed over the past 100 years. It is a proud legacy that we carry on in our daily work.
Learn more at: http://www.theaustin.com/aerospace-defense-aviation