Air-traffic controllers have one of the most stressful jobs on the planet. Navigating packed jetliners through crowded skies, heeding wind and weather dangers, maintaining a hectic schedule of takeoffs and landings—they’re all in a day’s work. So new recruits at Reagan National Airport spend 80 hours cutting their teeth on the simulator shown here, a few hundred feet below the real thing, before they can direct their first real flights.
Instructors can plug in almost any variable an air-traffic controller can face—snow, sleet, moonless nights, even the dreaded round-the-clock traffic of the holiday season. The wraparound screens project a perfectly to-scale computer model of the airport tower and surrounding region, simulating each step of the job, from taxiing to takeoff.
Every airport is unique, but Reagan National “is from a different era,” says Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Paul Takemoto. Built in 1941, it’s particularly small—a narrow corridor of open airspace above the Potomac River and just three short runways that intersect to form a complex traffic pattern. Add in security restrictions over the nation’s capital and you’ve got a training tool put to good use.
This article appears in the March 2012 issue of The Washingtonian.
Michael J. Gaynor has written about fake Navy SEALs, a town without cell phones, his Russian spy landlord, and many more weird and fascinating stories for the Washingtonian. He lives in DC, where his landlord is no longer a Russian spy.
Up In the Air
A look inside the air traffic control tower simulator at Reagan National Airport.
Photograph by Ron Blunt.
See Also:
We’re With the Band
Pub Crawl On Embassy Row
Air-traffic controllers have one of the most stressful jobs on the planet. Navigating packed jetliners through crowded skies, heeding wind and weather dangers, maintaining a hectic schedule of takeoffs and landings—they’re all in a day’s work. So new recruits at Reagan National Airport spend 80 hours cutting their teeth on the simulator shown here, a few hundred feet below the real thing, before they can direct their first real flights.
Instructors can plug in almost any variable an air-traffic controller can face—snow, sleet, moonless nights, even the dreaded round-the-clock traffic of the holiday season. The wraparound screens project a perfectly to-scale computer model of the airport tower and surrounding region, simulating each step of the job, from taxiing to takeoff.
Every airport is unique, but Reagan National “is from a different era,” says Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Paul Takemoto. Built in 1941, it’s particularly small—a narrow corridor of open airspace above the Potomac River and just three short runways that intersect to form a complex traffic pattern. Add in security restrictions over the nation’s capital and you’ve got a training tool put to good use.
This article appears in the March 2012 issue of The Washingtonian.
Michael J. Gaynor has written about fake Navy SEALs, a town without cell phones, his Russian spy landlord, and many more weird and fascinating stories for the Washingtonian. He lives in DC, where his landlord is no longer a Russian spy.
Most Popular in News & Politics
The Missing Men of Mount Pleasant
Another Mysterious Anti-Trump Statue Has Appeared on the National Mall
Muriel Bowser Defends Her BLM Plaza Decision and Looks Back on a Decade as Mayor
Yet Another Anti-Trump Statue Has Shown Up on the National Mall
Want to Search Donald Trump’s Truth Social Posts? A New Site Is Here to Help.
Washingtonian Magazine
July Issue: The "Best Of" Issue
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
How Would a New DC Stadium Compare to the Last One?
The Culture of Lacrosse Is More Complex Than People Think
Did Television Begin in Dupont Circle?
Kings Dominion’s Wild New Coaster Takes Flight in Virginia
More from News & Politics
A DNC Official Will Run for Eleanor Holmes Norton’s Seat
AC Problem Closes Four Smithsonian Museums on the National Mall
Epstein Files Fiasco Continues to Be Weird and Entertaining, GOP Congressman Sued Over Unpaid Rent, and Lotuses Hit Peak Bloom
I Tried to Train for American Ninja Warrior
Trump Wants to Rename Soccer, the Nationals Chose a Shortstop, and Virginians Are the US French-Fry-Eating Champions
Guest List: 5 People We’d Love to Hang Out With This July
The Washington Nationals Just Fired the Manager and GM Who Led Them to a Championship. Why Has the Team Been so Bad Since?
FBI Building Now on Track to Leave DC After All, Whistleblower Leaks Texts Suggesting Justice Department Planned to Blow Off Federal Court Orders, and NPS Cuts Leave Assateague Island Without Lifeguards