flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Airborne America takes flight in San Diego

Sports and Recreational Facilities

Airborne America takes flight in San Diego

The three-year-old company opens its first indoor skydiving facility featuring two wind tunnels.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | December 6, 2016

Airborne San Diego, a three-story indoor skydiving facility, can accommodate all patrons, from beginners to military personnel. Its owner, Airborne America, wants to up to 10 of these venues in the U.S. over the next 5-7 years. Image: Carrier Johnson + CULTURE

Later this month, Airborne San Diego, a 26,508-sf indoor skydiving facility, will open in this city’s East Village near Petco Park stadium.

This is the first facility operated by Airborne America, a Coronado, Calif.-based business that started in 2013. Airborne San Diego will be going head-to-head with iFly, which started in 1998 and until now was the only manufacturer operating wall-to-wall vertical wind tunnels in the U.S. iFly debuted its facility in San Diego in February 2016, one of 11 it opened in the U.S. this year. iFly currently operates a total of 37 locations worldwide, 27 of them in the U.S., and continues to expand.

Airborne America claims that what sets its San Diego facility apart from its competitor is that it will be the first of its kind to offer side-by-side “flight chambers,” glass tubes measuring 30-ft high by 14-ft in diameter, with wind tunnel speeds up to 200 miles per hour.

Having two tunnels allows for competition among patrons. And the facility will have a special training area set aside for military personnel where they can learn to free-fall before graduating to parachute jumps.

The wind speeds can be adjusted to accommodate the skill levels of individuals, and to compensate for variable body drag during advanced acrobatics. “By using a single, highly efficient wind tunnel fan instead of multiple smaller fans, wind noise is reduced, providing a quieter, more energy efficient flight environment,” the company states.

The three-story Airborne San Diego also offers a sky lounge with three levels of viewing platforms, and will operate an onsite café and bar.

 

 

Airborne San Diego will be the first indoor skydiving venue to offer dual wind tunnels, each 30-ft high, with wind speeds up to 200 mph.  Image: IndoorSkydivingSource.com

 

Carrier Johnson + CULTURE, which is based in the city, designed Airborne San Diego, and Swinerton Builders was the GC. Aerolab was the wind-tunnel engineer. The website Indoor Skydiving Source reports that Airborne San Diego will be the first in the U.S. to use Tunnelinstructor.org’s rating system to train its instructors.

Airborne San Diego’s design strives to recreate the way skydivers maneuver their bodies as they soar, drift, and plummet through the air. “It’s definitely based on the skydiving experience,” says Claudia Escala, RA, LEED AP, a principal with Carrier Johnson + CULTURE, who with Ray Varela, a design principal with the firm, spoke with BD+C last Friday.

Varela adds that the building assumes an “urban attitude,” with an internal courtyard that opens up to San Diego’s cityscape.

Alan “Buzz” Fink, Airborne America’s president and director, told the San Diego Union-Tribune that his company could open as many as 10 more facilities across the U.S. over the next five to seven years. (The construction cost of the San Diego facility was not made public.) Escala, who resides in the East Village, says that Fink—who also operates skydiving planes—was intimately involved in the design of the San Diego location, which she says “is a prototype for an urban setting.”

Related Stories

| Aug 26, 2013

Chicago Bears kick off season at renovated Halas Hall

An upgraded locker room, expanded weight room, and updated dining room with an outdoor patio greeted the Chicago Bears when they arrived at Halas Hall for practice this month. The improvements are part of a major expansion and renovation of the Bears’ headquarters in Lake Forest, Ill., completed by Mortenson Construction in less than seven months.

| Aug 22, 2013

Sports Facility Report [2013 Giants 300 Report]

Building Design+Construction's rankings of the nation's largest sports facility design and construction firms, as reported in the 2013 Giants 300 Report.

| Aug 22, 2013

Energy-efficient glazing technology [AIA Course]

This course discuses the latest technological advances in glazing, which make possible ever more efficient enclosures with ever greater glazed area.

| Aug 20, 2013

First look: $550 million Billie Jean King National Tennis Center renovation

The United States Tennis Association has announced its plans for a sweeping transformation of the USTABillie Jean King National Tennis Center that will include the construction of two new stadiums, as well as a retractable roof over Arthur Ashe Stadium.  The transformation will be implemented in three phases to begin at the conclusion of the 2013 US Open, with the goal of overall completion by the 2018 US Open.

| Aug 14, 2013

Green Building Report [2013 Giants 300 Report]

Building Design+Construction's rankings of the nation's largest green design and construction firms. 

| Aug 13, 2013

USGBC joins forces with Green Sports Alliance to promote sustainable venues

The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has announced a collaboration with the Green Sports Alliance, a prominent nonprofit organization supporting the development and promotion of green building initiatives in professional and collegiate sports.

| Jul 29, 2013

2013 Giants 300 Report

The editors of Building Design+Construction magazine present the findings of the annual Giants 300 Report, which ranks the leading firms in the AEC industry.

| Jul 19, 2013

Renovation, adaptive reuse stay strong, providing fertile ground for growth [2013 Giants 300 Report]

Increasingly, owners recognize that existing buildings represent a considerable resource in embodied energy, which can often be leveraged for lower front-end costs and a faster turnaround than new construction.

| Jul 3, 2013

World's biggest freestanding building opens in China

Measuring a stout 100 meters high, 500 meters long, and 400 meters wide, the New Century Global Centre in the Tianfu New District of Chengdu, China, is officially the world's largest freestanding building.

| Jul 3, 2013

Mall of America will double in size after $2.5 billion expansion

The nation's largest indoor mall will undergo a $2.5 billion, 10-year expansion project that will add attractions like an NHL-sized skating rink and an indoor water park. 

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021