FedEx Aeronautics Academic Center
Â鶹ÊÓƵ's (KSU) College of Aeronautics and Engineering presents its FedEx Aeronautics Academic Center (FAAC) at the Â鶹ÊÓƵ Airport.
The College of Aeronautics and Engineering’s (CAE) 18,000-square-foot Aeronautics Academic Center has been in use since Fall of 2019. An Aircraft Maintenance and Academic Center, which became the third brick-and-mortar building for the CAE, broke ground in Spring 2020. The FedEx building marked the second building for the college and the first brick-and-mortar facility at the Â鶹ÊÓƵ (KSU) Airport. The expansion allows students to learn in the classroom, laboratory and airplane all within the same campus.
The new FedEx Aeronautics Academic Center is included in the first phase of the university’s facilities' 10-year master plan and was also included in the 2014 Federal Aviation Administration master plan for the KSU Airport, which was approved by the Board in September 2015.
FAAC Facilities
The new center includes classrooms, flight debriefing rooms, flight simulators, student lounge space, and faculty offices.
Richard F. Schwabe Lobby
This lobby honors the memory of Richard Schwabe, the founding father of CAE's private pilot program. In this lobby can be found students and their flight instructors engaging with visitors from the community and transient pilots, sharing stories and eagerly awaiting their upcoming flight lessons.
Skyquest Weather Briefing Room
A space for pilots to prepare and make weather decisions for their upcoming flights.
Dispatch Office
Student employees manage all of our aircraft, knowing where they are going and when they will return.
Certified Flight Instructor (CFI) Lounge
A space with lockers and comfortable seating for CFIs to relax between flights.
Individual Briefing Rooms
Private space for students and instructors to brief flights before and after each lesson.
Flight Simulators
These advanced aviation training devices offer students the ability to learn advanced procedures and flight skills in a controlled environment without compromising fidelity or realism. Our simulators directly mirror our fleet of aircraft, effectively preparing our students for upcoming flight lessons.