The looming immensity of Moffett Field's Hangar One, built in 1933 to
house the world's largest--and last--rigid-frame dirigible, is an
unforgettable South Bay landmark. The lighter-than-air Macon cost 2.5
million Depression-era dollars and could hold 100 men and five
Sparrowhawk biplanes, yet its silvery bulk hovered silently or sailed up
to 80 miles an hour. It drew crowds as it darkened the skies around
Mountain View until it broke up in a storm two years later. Other blimp
squadrons, equipped with carrier pigeons instead of biplanes, succeeded
the Macon. Moffett Field has at various times served the navy, army, and
the air force. Now home to the world's largest wind tunnel, the NASA
Ames Research Center also supports research that blazes the frontiers of
supercomputing, robotics, space sciences, astrobiology, and
nanotechnology.