Trending Now - 17 Rare Pics Reveal A Fake Rooftop Town Built To Hide Boeing’s Factory From Japanese Air Strikes
During World War 2, one B-17 Bomber cost a little over $200,000 to produce. That’s about $3,4 million in today’s economy. And since the US Army requested thousands of these planes, they wanted to take every measure when securing the Boeing factory that produced them. And by “every measure” I mean hiring Hollywood set designers to build a fake neighborhood atop it and getting actors to inhabit the area.
Protecting it from potential air strikes, the “neighborhood” was constructed in 1944 and removed a year after the war. John Stewart Detlie was the Hollywood set designer who helped to hide the Boeing Plant No. 2. Using the same techniques as in the movies, fake streets, sidewalks, trees, fences, cars, and houses were set in place to fool the would-be attackers.
Underneath it, 30,000 men and women were constructing about 300 bombers per month to support the fight against Nazis. Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses dropped over 640,000 tons of bombs over Germany alone during the conflict, and of the 12,731 aircraft built, about fifty remain in complete form.
In the 1960s, the first Boeing 737s were assembled in Plant 2, but finished in the neighboring Thompson Site where the production of the 737 was eventually moved to. In the 1980s, the site was used as a machine shop but that discontinued as work shifted to more modern facilities. Ultimately, the structure fell into decay and in 2010, Boeing began the demolition of the plant.
(h/t vintageeveryday)
On the roof of Boeing Plant 2, camouflage trees and structures were shorter than a person
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
The faux neighborhood was designed to throw off possible air attacks
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
A street sign plays off the fake neighborhood at the corner of “Synthetic Street” and “Burlap Boulevard.”
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
Suzette Lamoureaux and Vern Manion examine one of the miniature bungalows in the “Boeing Wonderland.”
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
Trees were made of chicken wire and feathers
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
People lounge on a fake lawn during a publicity shot on top of the camouflaged roof
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
Structures that look like cars from overhead are parked along a fake street
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
An aerial view of the camouflage on top of Boeing Plant 2 shows that the “streets” were aligned with real residential neighborhoods nearby
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
Joyce Howe and behind her Susan Heidreich walking over the camouflaged Boeing Plant 2
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
Boeing plant aerial photo taken from around 5000 feet. This was taken in either 1944 or 1945
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
Thousands of Boeing workers gather in front of Boeing Plant 2 for ceremonies marking the changeover from B-17 to B-29 production on April 10, 1945
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
The first B-52A is rolled out at Boeing’s Seattle plant on March 18, 1954. In order to clear the hangar doorway, the plane’s 48-foot-high tail had to be folded down
Image credits: U.S. Air Force
Boeing Plant 2. 5000th celebrations
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
Boeing Plant 2. B-17G Flying Fortress cockpits under construction
Image credits: Bonneville Power Administration
B-17F production line, Boeing Plant 2, July 14 1942
Image credits: Seattle Times archive
“Rosie the Riveter” at work at Boeing Plant 2
Image credits: Bonneville Power Administration
Image credits: Bonneville Power Administration
here’s how it looks like now
Image credits: Google Maps