SEATTLE, Sept. 17, 2010--
The Museum of Flight  will move three iconic airplanes in its collection from their long-time  restoration home at Boeing's Plant 2 on Saturday, September 18. 
 
The planes include the Lockheed Constellation Super G,  the Boeing B-17F Flying Fortress, and the Boeing B-29 Superfortress. All of the  planes have been undergoing restoration at Plant 2, but are being relocated as  Boeing has made plans to demolish the historic airplane fabrication plant. 
 
The 1954 Lockheed Constellation Super G, which arrived  at The Museum of Flight's restoration facility at Plant 2 in September of 2009,  will be relocated to the museum's Airpark on the east side of East Marginal Way.  There, it will be on display, alongside such visitor favorites as the first jet  Air Force One, the British Airways Concorde, and the prototype 747. 
 
The B-17F - nicknamed the "Boeing Bee" - originally  rolled out of Plant 2 on February 13, 1943, served in the  European Theater in WWII, and spent time as a trainer, war memorial, aerial  sprayer, fire fighter, tanker and movie star, having appeared in the motion  picture Memphis Belle. It became part of the museum's collection in August 1990  and, now fully restored, is currently the only flyable B-17F in the  world.   
 
The 1945 B-29, known as T-Square 54, fought in the  Pacific during WWII, flying 37 bombing missions with the 875th Bomb  Squadron, 498th Bomb Group. It was later converted to an aerial  refueling tanker for the Korean Conflict and was loaned to the museum by the National Museum of  the United States Air Force in May 1993. 
 
The move of these  airplanes is particularly notable as it will be the last time a B-17 will leave  the Plant 2 factory, where 6,981 of the war-changing planes were assembled during  WWII. During the war, the plant employed as many as 30,000 people to turn out as  many as 362 bombers a month. 
The building was deemed  to be so vital to the World War II manufacturing effort that to foil possible  enemy bombing raids the roof was camouflaged with life-size fake trees, houses  and  streets.