During the “Golden Age” of airship travel, mooring masts and hangars were built to protect airships as they crossed the world. The British government built a hangar for the R101 model in Karâchi; the Brazilian government is also building one for German zeppelins in Rio de Janeiro. The world`s largest airship hangar at Goodyear Tire & Rubber in Akron, Ohio, was used to build the USS Akron (ZRS-4) and USS Macon (ZRS-5). Its length was 358 m and its roof 61 m. The U.S. Navy established ten airship bases in the United States during World War II as part of its coastal defenses. Sheds of this type are among the largest insulated wooden structures in the world. There are still 7 originals out of the 17 that existed; one of them now houses the Aviation Museum in Tillamook, Oregon. A hangar is a building that is often reduced to a cover and is used to house vehicles, aircraft, store grain, materials or goods. The word hangar comes from a northern French dialect.

Hangars built for rigid airships still exist at Moffett Field, Lakehurst Naval Airport, as well as Rio de Janeiro Air Force Base and Cardington. The aircraft carrying an aircraft carrier is also known as a hangar. Carl Rickard Nyberg used a shed to store his Flugan in the late nineteenth century. In 1909, Louis Blériot made a hard landing on a farm in northern France (between Sangatte and Calais) and took his plane to the barn. At that time, Blériot participated in a race to be the first man to cross the English Channel in a plane heavier than air. So he set up his seat in the unused stable. On his return home, Blériot contacted REIDsteel, the creator of the barn, and ordered three “sheds” for his personal use. REIDsteel continued to build hangars and spare parts. Hangars protect aircraft from weather conditions and ultraviolet rays. They can be used as a repair shop or, in some cases, as an assembly line. In addition, hangars make it possible to hide aircraft from the field of view of spy satellites or reconnaissance aircraft. Hangars are used to hold planes, helicopters or airships A light aircraft in the hangars of Kemble airport (Gloucestershire), England This word written Angar belongs to the next Flemish of Cange, who takes it from the low Latin angarium, a place where horses are shod; Angarium, which has gone from this special importance to the broader meaning of the hangar; As for Angarium, it comes from Angaria, station for couriers who provided the service of shipments in the Roman Empire, from the Greek word translated as mail, which is a Persian word (see ANGEL).

Scheler agrees with this etymology; Deny it; and Chevallet seeks the origin of the hangar in the German Hangen to be exhibited. The etymology of du Cange remains very likely; In the texts of the fifteenth century, however, hangardum, hangardium is written. An Airbus A319 is being repaired in a maintenance hangar The Wright brothers have stored and repaired their aircraft in a wooden hangar built in 1902 in the town of Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina. After completing construction of the Wright Flyer I in Ohio, the brothers returned to Kill Devil Hills and discovered their hangar damaged. They repaired the structure and built a new workshop while waiting for their leaflet to be sent. Airship hangars tend to be wider than traditional aircraft hangars, especially in terms of building height. Most early balloons used hydrogen gas to provide enough buoyancy to fly, so their hangars had to protect the combustible gas from a possible explosion. Hangars containing several balloons of this type were highly exposed to the risk of chain explosions. This is the reason why this type of hangar usually contained only one (or even 2) balloons of this type. One of the largest hangars built was for the former Soviet Air Force. It is now renovated to house a rainforest.

Other large hangars are those of Bangkok International Airport with dimensions 270x90x35 meters, SUNNYVALE NAS in the United States with 345x94x60 meters and At Filton Airport with 351x35x80 meters. Shelter, leaning, barracks, building, cradle, cellar, chartil, outbuilding, warehouse, stable, hayloft, garage, barn, attic, hall, local, store, press, shed, narrowing, roof (Franconian * hager, fence around the house) Artifact – airfield, airport, airfield [Hyper.] Hangar No. 2 of the United States Marine Corps Naval Airport, measures 330x90x60 meters of open hangar on different sides and is designed to house carts, plow instruments, tools, etc. Be careful without d in the end (don`t let Hager influence you). .