- The XPBB-1 Ranger was the first airplane built in Renton and only one was built, prompting the nickname “Lone Ranger.”
- From 1974 to 1985, the Renton plant also was a shipbuilding facility; military hydrofoil missile ships and commercial jetfoils were produced alongside the aircraft production lines.
- From airplanes to elephants: From July 1946 to 1949, no aircraft were built in Renton. The plant was used for other purposes, such as a temporary home for a circus—including elephants.
- The 737 has more than 500 operators worldwide
- Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, on average, over 2,800 737 airplanes are in the air carrying half a million passengers at any given time.*
- One 737 takes off or lands every 1.5 seconds.*
- The 737 family has carried more than 31 billion passengers; that is equivalent to every single man, woman and child flying at least four times. (2020 world population was 7.8 billion).*
- The 737 has flown more than 170 billion miles; equivalent to approximately 2,100 round trips from the earth to the sun.* This represents more than 241 million flights recording 376 million flight hours.
- Each of the four large commercial jetliners built at Renton—the 707, 727, 737 and 757—has surpassed the 1,000-aircraft-delivery milestone, a record of success unmatched by any other aircraft production facility in the world.
*As of November 2019