Worldport (Pan Am)

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Worldport was the trademarked name for Delta Air Lines' Terminal 3 at John F. Kennedy International Airport when it was owned by Pan American World Airways. Terminal 3, which opened in 1960, was constructed for Pan American World Airways and was originally known as the Pan Am Terminal and designed by Ives, Turano & Gardner, Assoc Architects and Walter Prokosch of Tippets-Abbett-McCarthy-Stratton with zodiac figures across the front by sculptor Milton Hebald. It was expanded in 1971 to accommodate the larger Boeing 747 and was renamed the "Pan Am Worldport".

It is particularly famous for its 4-acre "flying saucer" roof held up by 32 radial, prestressed girders and noted for its rooftop parking facilities: upon its expansion in 1972, it was also briefly the world's largest airline terminal. The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Guide to New York City called the terminal a "genuine architectural attempt to answer the problem of all-weather connections to the planes" but derided the overall concept as "compromised by an overabundance of distracting detail."

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