The Bellman Hangar was designed in the United Kingdom in 1936 by the Directorate of Works structural engineer, N. S. Bellman, as a temporary aircraft hangar capable of being erected or dismantled by unskilled labour with simple equipment and to be easily transportable. Commercial manufacturing rights were acquired by Head Wrightson & Co of Teesdale Iron Works, Thornaby-on-Tees. By November 1938, 10 had even been supplied to Russia.
Bellman hangar at former RAF Stoke Orchard
Bellman hangar at RAAF Base Wagga
Maryborough, Queensland, 2008.
Port Pirie, South Australia, 2007.
A hangar is a building or structure designed to hold aircraft or spacecraft. Hangars are built of metal, wood, or concrete. The word hangar comes from Middle French hanghart, of Germanic origin, from Frankish *haimgard, from *haim and gard ("yard"). The term, gard, comes from the Old Norse garðr.
An outside view of a hangar in a Royal Air Force base
The Wright Flyer outside the aircraft's makeshift hangar
Carl Richard Nyberg's hangar for his Flugan (fly) from 1908, Täcka udden in Lidingö, Sweden
Six helium-filled blimps stored in one of the two hangars at the former US Marine Corps Air Station Tustin