Hiller Aviation Museum
Address: 601 Skyway Road Pricing: Adults/$11, Ages 65+ and 5-17/$7, Under-5/free Phone: (650) 654-0200 Hours: Daily, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. How To Get There:
The museum is just off Highway 101 (Holly exit), about a half-hour from both San Francisco and San Jose.
Parking:Free lot
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Hiller Aviation Museum: Visitors, prepare for takeoff
Jun 13, 2010
A replica of the 1903 Wright Flyer is suspended from the ceiling of the atrium and the futuristic Rutan Defiant is parked on the roof. Those two planes, representing the past and future of flight, are among 50 full-size jets, planes, gliders, helicopters and other flying machines at the hangar-sized Hiller Aviation Museum, appropriately located so close to the San Carlos Airport that you can see what the pilots are wearing as they taxi down the runway.
Plenty of descriptions, photos, newsclippings and videos convey the history of aircraft in America, with an emphasis on the Bay Area’s prominent role. But people mainly visit the Hiller to admire the planes. The variety of colorful aircraft is impressive.
To whet your appetite, start by visiting the restoration workshop. Aviation craftsmen can usually be observed between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m., lovingly resurrecting old planes to be added to Hiller’s collection. Then stroll out to the 1970 Boeing 747 cockpit: go outdoors, up the tarmac stairs and into the forward section of the 747. Sit in one of the jet’s seats to watch a video on the history of 747s, then sit in the pilot’s seat, where you’re surrounded by hundreds of knobs, gauges, dials and levers.
On returning to the atrium, step inside the museum’s “aircraft gallery” and be prepared to be wowed. From two levels you’ll get to admire flying machines from the 1869 Avitor, a blimp-like unmanned “aeroplane” flown here on the peninsula long before the Wright Brothers, to the 1986 Boeing Condor, an unmanned spy plane with a 201-foot wingspan that could stay aloft for 80 hours. Some planes are on the main floor—you can touch or even climb into some of them—but most are suspended at different heights from the ceiling, crowding the “air space” of the gallery like an air traffic controller’s worst nightmare.
Also displayed in chronological order by decade are gliders built between 1883 and 1911; the first “aerobatics” plane (flown at San Francisco’s 1915 Pan Pacific Expo); a 1931 autogiro (an airplane/copter hybrid); the first FAA-licensed helicopter (the 1945 Hiller 360—designed by museum founder Stanley Hiller); and many more colorful aircraft.
The Hiller is fascinating for visitors of all ages, from 8-year-olds thrilled to sit in one of several cockpits (including a Blue Angels cockpit) to 80-year-olds who still remember when some of the older planes were on the cutting edge.
HelloSanFrancisco tip: Be sure to climb the stairs in the aircraft gallery to the “Future” section, where aircraft models offer a glimpse into the future of civil aviation—cool concepts like the bat ray-like Hypersoar plane and a 750-passenger jet.
- by Bob Cooper, San Francisco Reporter for HelloMetro
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Bob CooperBob Cooper is a full-time freelance writer (www.bob-cooper.com) who writes about travel, outdoor sports and health. He is a monthly contributor to Runner's World and has written recent articles for other national magazines such as Continental, Ladies' Home Journal and Inc.
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Click Images To Enlarge
The futuristic Rutan Defiant is parked on the roof of the museum, inviting drivers on adjacent Hwy. 101 to see more planes inside. Photo by Bob Cooper
A replica of the 1903 Wright Flyer, built with a donation by Virgin Air's Richard Branson, hovers over the atrium lobby. Photo by Bob Cooper
The cockpit and front cabin of a retired 747 can be visited behind the museum--where you may also see a plane taking off at San Carlos Airport. Photo by Bob Cooper
Sit in the pilot's seat of a real 747--you know you always wanted to--and pretend you know what all those knobs do. Photo by Bob Cooper
All sorts of flying machines--planes and copters, civilian and military, antiques and recent vintage--fill the aircraft gallery. Photo by Bob Cooper
Several military planes, including planes used during the Cold War by both sides, are on display. Photo by Bob Cooper
The Wright Brothers get all the credit now, but they were among many early aviators who made maded flight a reality. Photo by Bob Cooper
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