Monday, October 30, 2023
Playing Kawai Grand Piano Before Flight Time Jon Hammond
Monday, October 16, 2023
Jon Hammond Show 10 21 2023
Jon Hammond Show 10 21 2023
- by
- Jon Hammond
- Topics
- Jon Hammond Show, Jazz, Blues, News, Photography, Public Access Television, Hammond Organ, Grand Piano, Standards
- Language
- English
Jon Hammond Show 10 21 2023 air time 01:30 AM Eastern Standard Time on Manhattan Neighborhood Network MNN - 40th year on Public Access Television, from organist Jon Hammond - host of Hammond Report, HammondCast - Jon Hammond Show, Jazz, Blues,Music Travel News - photography.- Addeddate
- 2023-10-15 07:22:38
- Identifier
- jon-hammond-show-10-21-2023
- Topics
- Jon Hammond Show, Jazz, Blues, News, Photography, Public Access Television, Hammond Organ, Grand Piano, Standards
- Language
- English
Saturday, October 14, 2023
More Airport Piano Tunes From Jon Hammond
More Airport Piano Tunes From Jon Hammond
- by
- Jon Hammond
- Topics
- Grand Piano, Kawai Piano, Airport, Tunes, Jon Hammond, Solo Piano
- Language
- English
Airport Piano Time with Jon Hammond- Addeddate
- 2023-10-14 08:36:28
- Identifier
- more-airport-piano-tunes-from-jon-hammond
- Guess what, I noticed last night the Kawai grand piano has an electrical cord hanging down - I think this one has the player piano capability - but I am the humanoid player, not plugged in - built in Hamamatsu japan 'music city' where my Suzuki friends and Yamaha also are located! Jon Hammond
Tuesday, October 10, 2023
Airport Piano Time With Jon Hammond
Airport Piano Time With Jon Hammond
- by
- Jon Hammond
- Topics
- Grand Piano, Kawai Piano, Airport, Tunes, Jazz, Public, Standards, Jon Hammond, Hammond Report, HammondCast
- Language
- English
Airport Piano Time with Jon Hammond- Addeddate
- 2023-10-10 04:07:31
- Identifier
- airport-piano-time-with-jon-hammond
- Jon Hammond at the famous "Theme Building"
The Theme Building is a structure at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), considered an architectural example of the Space Age design style. Influenced by "Populuxe" architecture, it is an example of the Mid-century modern design movement later to become known as "Googie".[2] The Airport Theme Building Exterior and Interior was designated as a historic-cultural monument in 1993 by the city
The distinctive white building resembles a flying saucer that has landed on its four legs.[4] The initial design was created by James Langenheim, of Pereira & Luckman,[3] subsequently taken to fruition by a team of architects and engineers headed by William Pereira and Charles Luckman, that also included Paul Williams and Welton Becket. The civil engineer was Richard Bradshaw.
The appearance of the building's signature crossed arches as homogeneous structures is a design illusion, created by topping four steel-reinforced concrete legs extending approximately 15 feet above the ground with hollow stucco-covered steel trusses. To counteract earthquake movements, the Theme Building was retrofitted in 2010 with a tuned mass damper without changing its outward appearance.[5]
Constructed near the beginning of the Space Age, the building is an example of how aeronautics and pop culture, design and architecture came together in Los Angeles.
The original design for the airport created by Pereira & Luckman in 1959 had all the terminal buildings and parking structures connected to a huge glass dome, which would serve as a central hub for traffic circulation. The plan was eventually scaled down considerably, and the terminals were constructed elsewhere on the property.[7] The Theme Building was subsequently built to mark the spot intended for the dome structure, as a reminder of the original plan.
The building construction contract was awarded to Robert E. McKee General Contractor, Inc. of El Paso, Texas.[8]
The structure was dedicated on June 25, 1961, by Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson.[9] The Los Angeles City Council designated the building, which lies within the Westchester neighborhood of the city of Los Angeles, a historic-cultural monument (no. 570) in 1993.
A $4 million renovation, with retro-futuristic interior and electric lighting designed by Walt Disney Imagineering, was completed before the Encounter Restaurant opened there in 1997. Visitors are able to take an elevator up to the Observation Level to get a 360-degree view of arriving and departing planes.[11] An airport spokeswoman said that because of its appearance and views, some people thought it revolved after visiting it, even though it did not.[12]
After the September 11 attacks, the Observation Level was closed for security reasons. Following a $12.3 million restoration of the building completed in 2010, the observation level re-opened to the public on Saturdays and Sundays starting July 10.[13] Additionally, on September 9, 2003, a permanent memorial honoring those who perished in the attacks of September 11 was opened on the grounds of the Theme Building.[14]
The Encounter Restaurant closed for business in December 2013 with no future plans to reopen, although the building's observation level is still open on weekends.[15] Previously, the restaurant was closed in March 2007 for repairs after a half-ton piece of the stucco skin on the upper arches crashed onto the roof of the restaurant, and reopened on November 12, 2007.[16] Delaware North Companies Travel Hospitality Services operated the restaurant.[17]The restaurant being in a non-secure area of the airport, where travelers are reluctant to spend time when a possibly lengthy security checkpoint lay ahead, or leave after being screened and have to go through security again upon returning,[18] was cited as a reason for closing.[15]
In 2018, the Bob Hope USO at LAX relocated to the ground floor of the Theme Building, opening a 7,100 square foot facility described by its president as "the most technologically advanced USO in existence.