CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

Grand Central Air Terminal keeps Glendale in the early flight story

Glendale's Grand Central Air Terminal is a 1929 aviation building tied to transportation, architecture, and the early airport era.

GlendaleGrand Central Air Terminalaviation history

Glendale is often pictured through Brand Boulevard, hillside neighborhoods, studios, shopping, and the Verdugo Mountains. Grand Central Air Terminal adds a different angle: Glendale was once part of Southern California’s early aviation map.

The terminal is a 1929 building at 1310 Air Way. The National Park Service record ties it to transportation and architecture, with Art Deco and Mission/Spanish Revival design. That combination fits the moment. Early air travel needed practical airport buildings, but cities also wanted them to look modern, confident, and a little glamorous.

The old airport use is gone, but the building keeps that chapter visible. It gives this part of Glendale an aviation feel even now, with studio and creative-campus life nearby. The story is about airplanes, but also about a city trying to meet a new kind of travel before air travel became ordinary.

Public access can be limited, so treat this as a look-and-learn landmark unless current information says otherwise. Even from the outside, the terminal helps Glendale feel bigger than a bedroom suburb or media-office city. It was part of a region learning how to fly.

Where to see it

Grand Central Air Terminal at 1310 Air Way in Glendale. Public access can be limited, so check before planning a visit.

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Reviewed July 5, 2026

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