Austin–Bergstrom International Airport

(Redirected from Austin-Bergstrom)

Austin–Bergstrom International Airport, or ABIA (IATA: AUS, ICAO: KAUS, FAA LID: AUS, formerly BSM), is an international airport in Austin, Texas, United States, serving the Greater Austin metropolitan area. Located about 5 miles (8 km; 4 nmi) southeast of downtown Austin, it covers 4,242 acres (1,717 ha) and has two runways and three helipads.[4][6]

Austin–Bergstrom International Airport
Aerial view of the Barbara Jordan Terminal, 2015
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorCity of Austin Aviation Department
ServesGreater Austin
LocationAustin, Texas, U.S.
OpenedMay 23, 1999; 25 years ago (1999-05-23)
Focus city forDelta Air Lines[1][2]
Operating base forAllegiant Air (ends January 2025)[3]
BuiltSeptember 19, 1942; 82 years ago (1942-09-19)
Elevation AMSL542 ft / 165 m
Coordinates30°11′40″N 97°40′12″W / 30.19444°N 97.67000°W / 30.19444; -97.67000
Websitewww.austintexas.gov/airport
Maps
FAA airport diagram
FAA airport diagram
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
18L/36R 9,000 2,743 Concrete
18R/36L 12,250 3,734 Concrete
Helipads
Number Length Surface
ft m
H1 60 18 Concrete
H2 60 18 Concrete
H3 50 15 Concrete
Statistics (2023)
Total passengers22,095,876
Aircraft operations275,779
Total cargo (lbs.)283,054,195

The airport lies on the site of what was Bergstrom Air Force Base, named after Captain John August Earl Bergstrom, an officer who was the first person from Austin to be killed in World War II. The base was decommissioned in the early 1990s, and the land reverted to the city, which used it to replace Robert Mueller Municipal Airport as Austin's main airport in 1999. The airport is the third busiest in Texas, after Dallas/Fort Worth and Houston–Intercontinental, as well as the 27th busiest airport in the United States by passenger traffic. As of 2023, there are more than 550 arrivals and departures on a typical weekday to 97 destinations in North America and Europe.[7]

History

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Beginnings

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In 1942, the city of Austin purchased land and donated the land to the Federal government of the United States for a military installation, with the stipulation that the city would get the land back when the government no longer needed it. This land became Del Valle Army Air Base, or Del Valle Airfield. Del Valle Airfield was activated on September 19, 1942, on 3,000 acres (12 km2) leased from the City of Austin. The name of the base was changed to Bergstrom Army Airfield (AAF) in March 1943 in honor of Captain John August Earl Bergstrom, a reservist in the 19th Bombardment Group, who was killed at Clark Field, Philippines in 1941. He was the first Austinite killed in World War II. With the separation of the United States Air Force and United States Army in September 1947, the name again changed to Bergstrom Air Force Base. It would have this name until it was decommissioned in the early 1990s, with all military aviation ceasing in 1995 after more than 50 years.[8]

As Austin was quickly outgrowing the old Robert Mueller Municipal Airport,[9] the city began considering options for a new airport as early as 1971, when the Federal Aviation Administration proposed that Austin and San Antonio build a joint regional airport. That idea was rejected, as few Austinites supported driving halfway to San Antonio on Interstate 35 to catch a flight. Afterwards, the city submitted a proposal to the United States Air Force for joint use of Bergstrom Air Force Base in 1976. The Air Force rejected the proposal in 1978 as being too disruptive to its operations.

In the 1980s, neighborhoods around Mueller applied enough political pressure to force the city council to choose a site for a new airport from locations under consideration. In November 1987, voters approved a referendum designating a site near Manor. The city began acquiring the land but faced lawsuits from the Sierra Club and others concerned about the Manor location and its potential environmental impact.[10]

The plans to construct a new airport at the Manor location were abandoned in 1991 when the Base Realignment and Closure Commission selected Bergstrom for closure, and gave the nod to the city for the land and runways to be converted for use as a civilian airport. The city council decided to abandon the original plan to build the new airport near Manor, and resolved instead to move the airport to the Bergstrom site. The City of Austin hired John Almond—a civil engineer who had recently led the airport design team for the new airport expansion in San Jose, California—as Project Director for the new $585 million airport in Austin and to put together a team of engineers and contractors to accomplish the task.[11] The issue of a $400 million bond referendum for a new airport owned and operated by the city was put to a public vote in May 1993 with a campaign managed by local public affairs consultant Don Martin and then-Mayor Bruce Todd and was approved by 63% of the vote. Groundbreaking for the new airport began in November 1994.[12]

 
Austin-Bergstrom International Airport's air traffic control tower

On October 23, 1995, with a $10 million budget[13][14] and after the old tower, previously used by the US Air Force, was demolished,[15] construction began on building Austin's tallest primary building (277 ft (84 m)) that houses air traffic controllers. The new tower, completed a year before then-current president Bill Clinton arrived with his entourage, enabled Air Force One to be granted clearance to land. This made the president the "first passenger" to arrive at the new airport.

The main Air Force runway, 17R/35L, was retained along with most of its taxiways, as its high weight rating and long length would facilitate service by large long-range airliners while reducing construction costs. Bergstom's original secondary runway, 17L/35R, was closed and partially demolished to accommodate new taxiway sections directly connecting 17R/35L to the new terminal. The remnants of the former runway are used as a service road and a parking area for a Boeing 727 used for emergency training. A replacement 9,000-foot (2,700 m) runway 17L/35R was built east of the terminal, along with a general aviation complex on the southern side of the airport. Most former military buildings, including the original control tower, were demolished and cleared to make way for the new terminal and parking facilities, although some hangars and parking tarmac to the south was retained, along with a section of tarmac to the northeast of the primary runway that became the foundation for the airport's freight terminal. Some existing bridges were converted for ground vehicle access-road use. Military housing in the northwest portion of the former base was leveled, but some of its roads now serve a Texas Department of Transportation service facility. Several Travis County facilities near the airfield, including the county correctional facility and sheriff's training academy, were unaffected by the conversion project.

Bergstrom had the location identifier of BSM until Mueller's final closure in 1999 when it took Mueller's IATA code of AUS.[11] Initial issues with flight scheduling and routing led to proposed plans to keep Mueller operating in parallel with Bergstrom for a few weeks, but residents near Mueller blocked such efforts by appealing to the FAA, who refused to delay the transfer of the AUS identifier or to issue a new airport code for Mueller. Austin–Bergstrom opened to the public on May 23, 1999.

Opening

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Approaching AUS. The upper-level roadway is for departures, while the lower-level roadway is for arrivals.

Austin–Bergstrom International Airport opened to the public on May 23, 1999, with a 12,250 feet (3,730 m) runway, among the nation's longest commercial runways. The Barbara Jordan passenger terminal was originally conceived as an 18-gate terminal facility with a footprint of a bit more than 500,000 square feet (46,000 m2). ABIA was expanded during construction to have 24 contact gates with jet bridges (named Gate 2-Gate 25) and one gate without a jet bridge (named Gate 1) for a total footprint of 660,000 sq ft.[16]

The opening of the airport coincided with a considerable number of nonstop flights being operated into Austin from the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, as American Airlines had decided to compete with Southwest Airlines' scheduled service between Dallas Love Field (DAL) and Austin in addition to American and Delta Air Lines service between Dallas–Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) and AUS.[17] At the time, there were 42 nonstop flights every weekday being operated with mainline jet aircraft from the two primary airports located in the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex to Austin. By contrast, this same OAG lists a combined total of 24 nonstop flights every weekday at this time from the two primary airports serving the Houston area, William P. Hobby Airport (HOU) and George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH), to Austin.[18]

Recent history

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As the population and economic importance of Austin has grown in recent years, airlines have been introducing new nonstop flights to the airport instead of routing passengers through existing hubs in Dallas and Houston, causing dramatic growth in both passenger numbers and nonstop service at Austin–Bergstrom.[19] In March 2014, British Airways inaugurated a flight to London's Heathrow Airport. This was the airport's first scheduled transatlantic service.[20]

The terminal's first expansion project was completed in the summer of 2015. It added an enlarged customs and immigration facility on the arrivals level capable of processing more than 600 passengers per hour, two domestic baggage claim belts, and an enlarged security checkpoint on the ticketing level.[21] In 2019, a $350 million addition to the east side of the terminal added nine new gates, increasing the total number of gates from 25 to 34.[22] These gates are spaced farther apart, to accommodate additional flights operated by larger aircraft. Gates 1+3 and Gates 2+4 are able to act independently of each other when accommodating narrow body aircraft, or as one gate's Door A and Door B in a dual jet-bridge configuration when larger, wide-body aircraft arrive providing boarding options. The number of flexible-use gates that can accommodate both international and domestic flights increased from two to six.[23]

To accommodate the airport's rapid growth, a three-gate South Terminal opened on April 13, 2017. The terminal was built at a cost of US$12 million by a private company, LoneStar Airport Holdings, under a 40-year lease.[24] The terminal reused a building from the Bergstrom Air Force Base, adding outdoor waiting areas and a food-truck retail area. The gates are hardstands, without jet bridges, and are used exclusively by ultra-low-cost carriers Allegiant Air and Frontier Airlines.[25] The South Terminal is scheduled to be demolished as part of the forthcoming airport expansion, which led to a lawsuit from its operator, LoneStar Airport Holdings. The company says the airport is violating the 40-year lease agreement it signed in 2016 and said that it had invested about $50 million in building and operating the terminal. In 2023, a court agreed with LoneStar, and the airport agreed to a settlement, paying $88 million to break the lease.[24][26]

Future

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Austin-Bergstrom is currently undergoing a major expansion program, entitled "Journey With AUS", to accommodate the rapid growth in travel demand.[27][28] Chief amongst the expansion plans are two projects; the first being the construction of a new arrivals and departures hall that will consolidate all ticketing, security screening and baggage claims under one roof.[28] The second being the construction of Concourse B that will include 20 gates initially, and could be expanded up to 40 in the future.[29] Concourse B will be connected to the existing Barbara Jordan Terminal (to be renamed Concourse A) via an underground tunnel, and the tunnel will be capable of expanding to a future Concourse C.[27]

Facilities

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Terminal

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The passenger concourse at the Barbara Jordan Terminal

The Barbara Jordan Terminal is the airport's main terminal and has a total of 34 gates, six of which are capable of handling international flights.[30] There are several restaurants and food concessions inside the terminal, all but two of which are located inside the secured gate areas of the terminal.[31] The terminal also has a live music stage on which local bands perform in keeping with the spirit of Austin's proclamation as "The Live Music Capital of the World."

A secondary terminal with three gates known as the South Terminal is used by ultra low-cost carriers Allegiant Air and Frontier Airlines.[30] The South Terminal is accessed from a separate entrance on the south side of the airport perimeter from Burleson Road; it cannot be accessed from either the main airport entrance from SH 71 or the Barbara Jordan terminal except by completely exiting the airport grounds. A shuttle bus runs between the two terminals and the trip between the terminals takes between 15 and 20 minutes.[32] The facility has a retro look and passenger gates are not equipped with jet bridges; passengers walk under a covered walkway to board the aircraft by stairs.

Ground transportation

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Route 20, operated by the Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority, operates from the arrivals level of the Barbara Jordan Terminal every 15 minutes. The route takes passengers through the East Riverside Corridor to Downtown and University of Texas at Austin before heading east along Manor Road.[33]

Through the Project Connect plan,[34] the airport is planned be the southern terminus of the Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority Blue Line light rail, which will run through the East Riverside Corridor to Downtown Austin and The University of Texas at Austin as far north as North Lamar/US183. Blue Line construction costs are estimated at $1.3 billion[35] and may be completed as early as 2029.[36] The project (Proposition A[37]) was approved by voters on November 3, 2020.[38]

The airport offers a consolidated rent-a-car center (ConRAC) in a parking garage northeast of the Barbara Jordan Terminal and connected to the Red Garage. Ten rental car companies have passenger service counters on the second floor of the ConRAC, which can service up to 5,000 vehicles per day. The 1,600,000-square-foot (150,000 m2) facility opened in October 2015 and was built at a cost of US$162 million.[39] A shuttle bus travels between the South Terminal and the ConRAC.

Part of the ConRAC's ground floor serves as a "Ground Transportation Center" providing passengers access to taxis and ridesharing companies including Uber and Lyft.[39]

Airlines and destinations

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Passenger

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AirlinesDestinationsRefs
Aeroméxico Seasonal: Mexico City [40]
Aeroméxico Connect Mexico City [40]
Air Canada Toronto–Pearson
Seasonal: Montréal–Trudeau, Vancouver
[41]
Alaska Airlines Portland (OR), San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle/Tacoma [42]
Allegiant Air Asheville, Cincinnati, Des Moines, Grand Rapids, Knoxville, Provo, Sarasota [43]
American Airlines Cancún, Charlotte, Chicago–O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Los Angeles, Miami, New York–JFK, Orange County (ends January 5, 2025),[44] Philadelphia, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, San José del Cabo [45]
American Eagle Dallas/Fort Worth
Seasonal: Aspen
[45]
British Airways London–Heathrow [46]
Copa Airlines Panama City–Tocumen [47]
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, Boston, Detroit, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York–JFK, Orlando, Salt Lake City, San Francisco (begins June 8, 2025),[48] Seattle/Tacoma, Tampa (begins June 8, 2025)[48] [49]
Delta Connection Cincinnati, Harlingen, Indianapolis (begins May 7, 2025),[48] McAllen, Memphis (resumes May 7, 2025),[48] Midland/Odessa, Nashville, New Orleans (begins February 27, 2025),[50] Panama City (FL) (begins March 9, 2025),[48] Raleigh/Durham [49]
Frontier Airlines Atlanta, Cleveland, Denver, Las Vegas [51]
Hawaiian Airlines Honolulu [52]
JetBlue Boston
Seasonal: New York–JFK
[53]
KLM Amsterdam [54]
Lufthansa Frankfurt [55]
Southwest Airlines Albuquerque, Amarillo, Atlanta, Baltimore, Burbank, Chicago–Midway, Chicago–O'Hare, Columbus–Glenn, Dallas–Love, Denver, El Paso, Fort Lauderdale, Harlingen, Houston–Hobby, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Lubbock, Miami, Midland/Odessa, Milwaukee (begins March 6, 2025),[56] Minneapolis/St. Paul, Nashville, New Orleans, Oakland, Oklahoma City, Ontario, Orange County, Orlando, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Pittsburgh, Raleigh/Durham, Sacramento, Salt Lake City, San Diego, San Jose (CA), St. Louis, Tampa, Tulsa, Washington–National
Seasonal: Boston, Cancún, Charleston (SC), Jacksonville (FL), Montrose, Omaha (begins November 23, 2024),[57] Panama City (FL), Pensacola, Puerto Vallarta, Reno/Tahoe (begins March 6, 2025),[56] San José del Cabo, San Juan
[58]
Spirit Airlines Fort Lauderdale, Las Vegas, Los Angeles (ends December 3, 2024), Newark, Orlando [59]
Sun Country Airlines Seasonal: Minneapolis/St. Paul [60]
United Airlines Chicago–O'Hare, Denver, Houston–Intercontinental, Los Angeles, Newark, San Francisco, Washington–Dulles [61]
United Express Houston–Intercontinental
Seasonal: Chicago–O'Hare
[61]
Viva Monterrey [62]
WestJet Seasonal: Calgary [63]

Cargo

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AirlinesDestinationsRefs
Amazon Air Cincinnati, Lakeland, Miami, San Bernardino
Atlas Air Cincinnati, Laredo, Miami [64]
DHL Aviation Cincinnati, Memphis, Tulsa [65]
FedEx Express Brownwood, El Paso, Fort Worth/Alliance, Los Angeles, Memphis, San Angelo
UPS Airlines Dallas/Fort Worth, Houston–Intercontinental, Louisville

Statistics

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Top destinations

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Busiest domestic routes from AUS (May 2023 – April 2024)[66]
Rank City Passengers Carriers
1   Atlanta, Georgia 593,880 Delta, Southwest
2   Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas 551,210 American
3   Denver, Colorado 532,730 Frontier, Southwest, United
4   Los Angeles, California 529,300 American, Delta, Southwest, United
5   Las Vegas, Nevada 438,950 Allegiant, American, Delta, Frontier, Southwest, Spirit
6   Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Arizona 389,850 American, Southwest
7   Orlando, Florida 365,340 American, Delta, Southwest, Spirit
8   Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois 358,270 American, Southwest, United
9   New York–JFK, New York 349,090 American, Delta, JetBlue
10   Houston–Intercontinental, Texas 275,120 United
Busiest international routes from AUS (July 2023 – June 2024)[67]
Rank Airport Scheduled passengers Carriers
1   Cancún, Mexico 258,858 American, Southwest
2   London–Heathrow, United Kingdom 220,397 British Airways, Virgin Atlantic
3   San José del Cabo, Mexico 118,048 American, Southwest
4   Toronto–Pearson, Canada 83,619 Air Canada
5   Frankfurt, Germany 72,881 Lufthansa
6   Amsterdam, Netherlands 68,795 KLM
7   Mexico City, Mexico 64,228 Aeroméxico
8   Panama City–Tocumen, Panama 52,526 Copa Airlines
9   Puerto Vallarta, Mexico 27,505 American, Southwest
10   Liberia, Costa Rica 19,057 American

Airline market share

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Largest airlines at AUS
(May 2023 – April 2024)[66]
Rank Airline Passengers Share
1 Southwest Airlines 8,472,000 41.19%
2 American Airlines 3,722,000 18.09%
3 Delta Air Lines 2,755,000 13.39%
4 United Airlines 2,330,000 11.33%
5 Envoy Air 769,000 3.74%

Airport traffic

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Annual passenger traffic at AUS airport. See Wikidata query.

Annual traffic

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Annual passenger traffic at AUS; 1999-present[68][69]
Year Passengers Year Passengers Year Passengers
1999 6,644,482(a) 2009 8,220,898 2019 17,343,729
2000 7,642,341 2010 8,652,480 2020 6,472,579
2001 7,181,190 2011 9,085,203 2021 13,570,771
2002 6,720,668 2012 9,436,197 2022 21,089,289
2003 6,706,385 2013 10,027,694 2023 22,095,876
2004 7,238,645 2014 10,719,320 2024 14,586,757(YTD)
2005 7,683,545 2015 11,902,874 2025
2006 8,261,310 2016 12,439,788 2026
2007 8,885,391 2017 13,889,305 2027
2008 9,039,075 2018 15,819,912 2028

Note:(a); Includes passenger totals at Robert Mueller Municipal Airport for January-May 1999.

Accidents and incidents

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  • March 1, 2002: During an instrument landing system (ILS) approach in bad weather, a Beechcraft A36 Bonanza, registration number N7236L, crashed on airport grounds and burned out after the pilot initiated a missed approach. The aircraft was destroyed and the pilot and single passenger were killed. The accident was attributed to "The pilot's failure to maintain airspeed, resulting in a stall. Contributing factors were the low ceiling, fog, and the unforecast weather conditions."[70]
  • December 7, 2009: A Piper PA-46-500TP, registration number N600YE, impacted terrain near Mendoza, Texas, in a steep descending right turn during an ILS approach in low visibility, substantially damaging the aircraft and killing the pilot and single passenger. Immediately prior to the crash, an air traffic controller had instructed the pilot to perform a "combination of descending turns" and "heading changes [that] were rapid [and] of large magnitude..." Additionally, post-crash toxicological tests of the pilot found evidence of diphenhydramine, a sedating antihistamine. The accident was attributed to "The pilot's spatial disorientation, which resulted in his loss of airplane control. Contributing to the pilot's spatial disorientation was the sequence and timing of the instructions issued by the air traffic controller. The pilot's operation of the airplane after using impairing medication may also have contributed."[71]
  • May 7, 2020: An adult male pedestrian trespassed on the airport's runway 17R and was hit and killed by Flight 1392, a Boeing 737-700 operated by Southwest Airlines, as it landed. There were no injuries to passengers or crew, but the plane sustained damage to its left engine nacelle. The victim was not authorized to be on the runway at the time.[72][73][74]
  • February 4, 2023: FedEx Flight 1432 was attempting to land on runway 18L but had to abort and go around when Southwest Airlines Flight 708 was cleared for departure on the same runway and had already begun its takeoff roll. A subsequent tweet from the NTSB described the incident as a "possible runway incursion and overflight involving airplanes from Southwest Airlines and FedEx."[75] The planes were barely 150 feet apart.[76]

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  76. ^ Isidore, Chris (March 2, 2023). "NTSB: FedEx plane was only 150 feet off ground when disaster was averted | CNN Business". CNN. Retrieved October 20, 2023.
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