Boeing Everett Factory Explained

Boeing Everett Production Facility
Built:1967
Location:Everett, Washington, United States
Industry:Aerospace
Products:Airplane assembly
Employees:30,000[1]
Architect:Boeing
Style:Industrial
Area:Total: 1000acres
Main building: 98.3acres
Volume:Main building: 472370319cuft, see List of largest buildings
Address:3003 West Casino Road
Everett, Washington
Owner:Boeing Commercial Airplanes

The Boeing Everett Factory, officially the Everett Production Facility, is an airplane assembly facility operated by Boeing in Everett, Washington, United States. It sits on the north side of Paine Field and includes the largest building in the world by volume at over 472e6cuft, which covers 98.3acres.[1]

The entire complex covers approximately 1000acres and spans both sides of State Route 526 (named the Boeing Freeway). The factory was built in 1967 for the Boeing 747 and has since been expanded several times to accommodate new airliners, including the 767, 777, and 787 programs. More than 5,000 widebody aircraft have been built at the Everett factory since it opened.[2]

Facilities

The Boeing Everett complex sits on 1000acres in southwestern Everett, about 22miles north of Seattle.[3] [4] It includes up to 200 separate buildings and facilities, mostly on the north and east sides of Paine Field's main runway, and straddles both sides of State Route 526 (named the Boeing Freeway).[5] [6] The complex includes a fire station, a medical clinic, a gymnasium, on-site security, and seven restaurants and cafes.[7] [8], Boeing has 30,000 workers at its Everett site who are scheduled in three shifts, primarily during daytime hours.[9] [10] The company is the largest employer in Everett and Snohomish County.[11] [12]

The main assembly building, immediately north of the Boeing Freeway, covers 98.3acres and is organized into six production lines that are separated by walls, offices, and other spaces.[13] [14] It is the world's largest building by volume at 472370319cuft of interior space according to Guinness World Records;[4] [15] the building is large enough to fit all of Disneyland or 75 American football fields.[7] The production lines move at a rate of 1.5inches per minute[8] and are guided by 26 overhead cranes that move along 31miles of track.[16] [17] These cranes are suspended along the roof trusses, which are NaNfeet long and are supported by columns that are 90feet tall.[18] A network of pedestrian and utilities tunnels span 2.33miles under the factory floor;[19] employees also use a shared fleet of 1,300 bicycles and tricycles to move around the factory floor.[4] [12]

The main building is 114feet tall[12] and has six hangar doors that are each 82feet tall and NaNfeet wide. The doors have a six-part mural that was recognized as the world's largest digital image in 2006 by Guinness World Records.[20] [21] The building has a central ventilation system but lacks air conditioning; it is instead cooled by opening the doors for outdoor air.[22] The building is heated through residual warming from employees and equipment, including the 1 million overhead lights in the factory.[4] [23] An urban legend states that clouds used to form inside the main building due to its size prior to the installation of upgraded ventilation systems.[4] [23] Adjacent buildings include a composite wing manufacturing plant with 1.2e6sqft of floor space;[13] paint and seal buildings; and an auxiliary fuselage assembly plant for the Boeing 777X.[24] [25]

The north side of the factory complex is connected to the flight line at Paine Field via a taxiway that crosses over the Boeing Freeway west of Airport Road;[26] airplanes are towed from the factory to flight line facilities at night to avoid disrupting traffic.[27] The south side includes a set of three paint hangars,[27] a delivery center with conference rooms,[28] and parking spaces for airplanes.[29] The flight line area connects to the main runway at Paine Field, which is 9010feet long and is the only one at the airport that can accommodate jetliners.[30] The runway has also used for commercial service since the opening of a new passenger terminal at the airport in 2019.[31] Additional spaces for parked airplanes are on the west side of the runway and southwest of the main building;[32] Paine Field's short crosswind runway has also occasionally been used to park airplanes since 2010;[33] [34] the runway and an adjacent taxiway have been leased by Boeing from the county government to store airplanes.[35] [36]

History

Boeing opened its first facilities in Everett on October 13, 1943, at a former auto garage to produce sections for the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. The company had several small shops in the city, but their presence in the area was reduced by 1963.[37] The first 25 orders for the Boeing 747, to be the world's largest jetliner, were sold to Pan American World Airways for $525 million (equivalent to $ billion in) in March 1966. The program would require a larger factory than their Renton facility, which was instead planned to be used for the conceptual 2707 supersonic airliner.[38] Among the sites considered by Boeing for a new factory were Monroe, Washington; McChord Air Force Base near Tacoma, Washington;[39] Moses Lake, Washington; Cleveland, Ohio; and Walnut Creek, California.[37] [40]

On June 17, 1966, the company announced that it had selected a site adjacent to Paine Field as the future home of its Boeing 747 assembly plant.[41] Boeing purchased north of the airport, which had primarily been used by the U.S. military and small businesses;[37] [42] a 75-year lease for use of Paine Field was also signed with the county government, which owned the airport.[43] The company had already spent several months acquiring properties around the airport in preparation of the announcement and cleared parts of the site by late May.[40] [44]

The 158e6cuft factory, planned to become the world's largest building by volume, was built in sections beginning in late June.[45] [46] The first section housed a mockup of the Boeing 747 that had been under assembly at the Renton factory.[47] A railroad spur connecting the site to the mainline tracks at Mukilteo was constructed through Japanese Gulch.[48] The first 113 workers at the Everett factory began work on January 3, 1967, and prepared for the assembly of the relocated Renton mockup.[49] The factory was officially opened on May 1, 1967, four months after the first workers had arrived to start construction of the 747.[37] Construction of the factory involved 4.5e6cuyd of soil to be excavated.[50]

The main factory building was originally 43acres and later expanded by 45 percent in 1979 as part of the Boeing 767 program and another 50 percent in 1990 for the Boeing 777.[51] [52] The company acquired 68acres of Paine Field property from the county government in 1989 to expand its flight line.[53]

To accommodate the Dreamlifter, a converted 747-400 which delivered 787 sections to the plant, a base was constructed on the western edge of Paine Field's runway. Opening in October 2013, the 17acres base, called the Dreamlifter Operations Center, was funded by Snohomish County with $35 million in bonds; it is owned by the county via the airport, with Boeing originally leasing the site and servicing the bonds.[54] Following Boeing's decision to shutter the 787 production line in Everett and consolidate 787 production in South Carolina, the lease on the Dreamlifter Operations Center was transferred to FedEx for use as a cargo base.[55]

Several workers at the Everett facility tested positive for COVID-19 in early March 2020, prior to a full shutdown of operations.[56] The factory was shut down for three weeks until workers were able to return with mandatory face masks, social distancing, and staggered start times to reduce potential exposure.[57]

Current production aircraft

Boeing 767

See main article: article and Boeing 767. The Boeing 767 is a mid-size, wide-body, twin-engine, jet airliner. First introduced in 1979 to complement the larger 747, the aircraft was capable of carrying 218 passengers in a typical three-class configuration over a range of 5990lk=inNaNlk=in and a cruising speed of Mach 0.80 (530 mph, 851 km/h, 470 kn).

Production of passenger variants ended in 2017 after its successor, the 787 Dreamliner, entered service in 2011. Freighter and military variants remain in limited production.

These are the 767 variants currently in production as of 2023:

Boeing 777

See main article: article, Boeing 777 and Boeing 777X.

The Boeing 777 is a large-size, wide-body, twin-engine, jet airliner. Production of this plane began in 1993., the factory is being retooled to produce the 777X, the next-generation of the aircraft. The 777-9 provides seating for 426 passengers and a range of over 7,285 nmi (13,492 km; 8,383 mi).

These are the 777 variants currently in production as of 2024:

Boeing 737 MAX

See main article: article and Boeing 737 MAX. The Boeing 737 MAX is a mid-size, narrow-body, twin-engine, jet airliner. Production of the aircraft is expected to begin in the second-half of 2024. This will be the fourth production line for the Boeing 737 MAX and will be the first 737 model not produced at the Boeing Renton Factory. The line will replace the discontinued Boeing 787 line at the factory.[59] [60]

In January 2024, the FAA announced it would not grant any production expansion of the 737 MAX as a result of the in-flight loss of a plug door panel of a MAX 9 jet.[61] [62] [63]

Former production aircraft

Boeing 747

See main article: article and Boeing 747.

The Boeing 747 is a large-size, wide-body, four-engine, jet airliner. The 747-8I, the last passenger variant in production, is capable of carrying 467 passengers in a typical three-class configuration, has a range of 8000nmi and a cruising speed Mach 0.855 (570 mph, 918 km/h, 495 kn). The Boeing 747 was one of the first wide-body aircraft to be produced and was the first jet to use a wide-body configuration for carrying passengers. Because of the vast size of the 747, the Boeing Everett Factory was designed and built to accommodate the assembly of these large planes as there was not enough room at the Boeing facilities in Seattle. Production of this aircraft began in 1967 and continued until 2022, with the last 747-8F (N863GT) rolling out in December for customer Atlas Air.[64] [65] [66]

Boeing 787

See main article: article and Boeing 787 Dreamliner.

The Boeing 787 Dreamliner is a mid-size, wide-body, twin-engine jet airliner. The current passenger variants in production, are capable of carrying 242–290 passengers in a typical two-class configuration, have a range of 7355- and a cruising speed of Mach 0.85 (562 mph, 902 km/h, 487 kn). Production of this plane began in 2006.

In February 2011, Boeing announced that some 787 work was being moved to a plant in North Charleston, South Carolina in order to relieve overcrowding of 787s at Everett caused by large volumes of 787 orders.[67] In July 2014, Boeing announced that the 787-10 variant, the longest variant of the 787, would be produced exclusively in South Carolina as the fuselage pieces for that variant are too large for the Dreamlifter to fit for transport to Everett.[68] [69]

Undertaking drastic cost-cutting measures in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and its resulting impact on aviation, Boeing announced in July 2020 that it would consider consolidating all of its 787 assembly in a single location; the company chose to move all production to South Carolina on October 1, causing backlash from the Washington state government.[70] [71] The move was completed in February 2021; it was cemented with Boeing's agreement to transfer its lease of the Dreamlifter Operations Center to package courier FedEx in April 2021. FedEx, which takes over the lease on November 1, plans to use it for its cargo airline operations.[72]

The two 787 variants formerly produced in Everett were the 787-8 and the 787-9.

Tours

Following several months of unofficial visits, Boeing began offering factory tours with the first rollout of the 747 in 1968.[73] [74] The first year of tours had over 39,000 visitors, which later grew to 55,000 annually by the 1980s; a dedicated tour building was constructed in 1984 and later replaced by the Future of Flight Aviation Center in 2005.[73] [19] The new center has a theater, exhibits, a Boeing Store gift shop, and café. As of 2020 over 150,000 people come each year to visit the factory. The Boeing factory tour was suspended from 2020 to 2023 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[75]

Notes and References

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  5. News: Gates . Dominic . Dominic Gates . March 18, 2020 . Boeing workers increasingly angry, worried as coronavirus infections rise inside the factories . . March 12, 2024.
  6. April 2019 . Everett Site Shuttle System . Boeing . . March 13, 2024.
  7. News: Jones . Jay . June 12, 2011 . Boeing's jumbo jets are built here . . March 12, 2024.
  8. News: Wattles . Jackie . August 9, 2018 . An exclusive tour of Boeing's gigantic jet factory . . March 12, 2024.
  9. News: Podsada . Janice . December 7, 2022 . Final 747 rollout signals end of an era for Boeing, Everett . The Everett Herald . March 12, 2024.
  10. News: Catchpole . Dan . March 27, 2017 . Some at Boeing worry new work shifts will worsen traffic . The Everett Herald . March 12, 2024.
  11. Web site: July 31, 2023 . Annual Comprehensive Financial Report For The Year Ended December 31, 2022 . 171 . Snohomish County Finance Department . March 12, 2024.
  12. News: Flores . Brian . August 16, 2018 . Life inside the Everett's Boeing production facility: It's like a city . . March 13, 2024.
  13. News: Gates . Dominic . May 19, 2016 . Boeing shows off new 777X wing center . The Seattle Times . March 13, 2024.
  14. News: Gates . Dominic . January 30, 2023 . Boeing to set up a new 737 MAX assembly line in Everett . The Seattle Times . March 13, 2024.
  15. Web site: Largest factory (by volume) . . March 13, 2024.
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  42. Web site: Riddle . Margaret . August 22, 2007 . Paine Field (Snohomish County) . . March 12, 2024.
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  44. News: Lane . Bob . May 20, 1966 . Huge, Level Field in Making For Boeing—or Something . 4 . The Seattle Times.
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  48. News: Moody . Dick . July 15, 1966 . Fir Is Flying on Boeing Railroad Spur . 64. The Seattle Times.
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  57. News: Podsada . Janice . April 21, 2020 . Wary Boeing workers return to the assembly lines in Everett . The Everett Herald . March 12, 2024.
  58. Web site: Boeing Begins Assembling 3rd KC-46A Tanker Aircraft. Boeing. August 14, 2014.
  59. News: Ostrower . Jon . Boeing to open 737 Max line at Everett plant . 30 January 2023 . The Air Current . 30 January 2023.
  60. News: Gates . Dominic . Boeing to set up a fourth 737 MAX assembly line in Everett . 30 January 2023 . The Seattle Times . 30 January 2023.
  61. News: Gates . Dominic . Rosenblatt . Lauren . FAA blocks Boeing production push but clears way for MAX 9s to fly again . 28 January 2024 . The Seattle Times . 24 January 2024.
  62. News: Josephs . Leslie . FAA halts Boeing 737 Max production expansion, but clears path to return Max 9 to service . 28 January 2024 . CNBC . 24 January 2024 . en.
  63. News: FAA Orders Halt To Boeing 737 MAX Production Growth Plan Aviation Week Network . 28 January 2024 . aviationweek.com.
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  68. Web site: Boeing: Boeing in South Carolina. www.boeing.com. February 23, 2019.
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  71. News: Gates . Dominic . Dominic Gates . October 1, 2020 . Boeing makes it official: Washington state will lose 787 production next year . The Seattle Times . October 1, 2020.
  72. News: Gates . Dominic . FedEx close to a deal to operate out of Paine Field as Boeing abandons its 787 Dreamlifter center . April 21, 2021 . The Seattle Times . April 19, 2021.
  73. August 4, 1998 . Two Millionth Visitor Tours Everett Factory With Boeing CEO . Boeing . March 12, 2024.
  74. Web site: Boeing: Future of Flight Aviation Center & Boeing Tour -- Fact Sheet . June 14, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120519030427/http://www.boeing.com/commercial/tours/gw.html . May 19, 2012 .
  75. News: Podsada . Janice . October 1, 2023 . Boeing's iconic Everett factory tour to resume . The Everett Herald . March 13, 2024.