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LaGuardia Airport

Fiorello La Guardia Airport is located in Flushing, a neighborhood within New York, New York, near the Flushing Bay. It serves the New York, New York area. Its IATA airport code is LGA.

LaGuardia is New York's main domestic airport, due to its central location in respect to the rest of the city (especially Manhattan). However, a perimeter rule prohibits incoming and outgoing flights that exceed 1,500 miles, so most transcontinental and international flights use JFK International Airport in Jamaica, New York City, New York or Newark Liberty International in Newark, New Jersey.

In spite of the airport's small size, wide-body aircraft regularly visit the airport. In fact, the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 and Lockheed L-1011 were specifically designed to use LaGuardia.

LaGuardia regularly has flights to the United States and Canada, and gets seasonal flights to the Bahamas and Bermuda.

Contents

History

Construction

The initiative to develop the airport began with a verbal outburst by New York mayor Fiorello LaGuardia upon the arrival of his TWA flight at Newark. He demanded to be taken to New York, and ordered the plane to be flown to Brooklyn's Floyd Bennett Field, giving an impromptu press conference to reporters along the way. At that time, he urged New Yorkers to support a new airport within their city.

American Airlines accepted LaGuardia's offer to start a pilot program of scheduled flights to Floyd Bennett, although the program failed after several months because of Newark's relative proximity to Manhattan (LaGuardia went as far as to offer police escorts to airport limousines, in an attempt to get American to stay).

During the Floyd Bennett experiment, LaGuardia and American executives began an alternative plan to build a new airport in Queens, where it could take advantage of the new Queens-Midtown Tunnel to Manhattan. This was the site eventually chosen for the new airport. Building on the site required moving landfill from Rikers Island, then a garbage dump, onto a metal reinforcing framework. The framework below the airport still causes magnetic interference on the compasses of outgoing aircraft: signs on the airfield warn pilots about the problem.

The airport was dedicated on October 15, 1939 as the New York Municipal Airport, and opened for business on that December 2nd. During the dedication ceremony, a banner plane flew overhead, with the words "NAME IT LAGUARDIA" fluttering along behind it. (The modern name was officially applied when the airport moved to Port Authority control in 1947.)

Because of American's pivotal role in the development of the airport, LaGuardia gave the airline extra real estate during the airport's first year of operation, including four hangars (an unprecedented amount of space at the time) and a large office space that would be turned into the world's first airline lounge, the LaGuardia Admirals Club.

Later development

Although LaGuardia was a very large airport for the era in which it was built, it soon became excessively small for the amount of air traffic it had to handle. Starting in 1968, general aviation aircraft were charged heavy fees to operate from LaGuardia during peak hours, driving many GA operators to airports such as Teterboro, New Jersey. In 1984, to further combat overcrowding at LGA, the Port Authority instituted a "perimeter rule" banning flights from LaGuardia to cities more than 1,500 miles away (Western Airlines unsuccessfully challenged the rule in federal court). Later, the Port Authority also moved to connect JFK and Newark Airport to regional rail networks with the AirTrain, in an attempt to make the more distant airports competitive with LaGuardia. [1] In addition to these local regulations, the FAA also limited the number of flights and types of aircraft that could operate at LaGuardia (see 14 CFR § 193).

However, LaGuardia's traffic continued to grow. By 2000, the airport routinely experienced overcrowding-related delays, many of which were more than an hour long. That year, Congress passed legislation to revoke the federal traffic limits on LaGuardia by 2007. The reduced demand for air travel following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks quickly slowed LaGuardia's traffic growth, helping to mitigate the airport's delays: ongoing Port Authority investments to renovate the Central Terminal Building and improve the airfield layout have also made the airport's operations more efficient in recent years.

Disasters

On December 29, 1975, a bomb exploded at LaGuardia, killing 11 people and injuring 74. The exact perpetrators behind this attack are not known.

Terminals

La Guardia has four terminals connected by buses and walkways.

Central Terminal Building (CTB)

Concourse A

Concourse B

Concourse C

Concourse D

  • American Airlines (Chicago O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Fort Lauderdale, Kansas City, Miami, Nashville, Nassau [seasonal], Orlando, St. Louis, Tampa, Toronto)

Delta Terminal

Marine Air Terminal

The MAT was the airport's original terminal. It is so named because it once served the flying boats of Pan American World Airways, the mainstay of international travel during the 1930s and 1940s. Pan Am later used the terminal for its shuttle service.

  • Delta Shuttle (Boston, Washington Reagan)

US Airways Terminal

  • Colgan Air (Albany NY, Augusta ME, Charlottesville, Hyannis, Ithaca NY, Lebanon NH, Manchester NH, Martha's Vineyard [seasonal], Nantucket, Norfolk VA, Portland ME, Providence, Rochester, Syracuse NY)
  • US Airways (Bermuda [seasonal], Charlotte, New Orleans, Pittsburgh)
  • Allegheny Air, Colgan Air , Chautauqua Airlines, Piedmont Air, and PSA Airlines dba US Airways Express (Allentown, Baltimore/Washington, Buffalo, Burlington, Charleston SC, Columbus, Greensboro, Greenville, Philadelphia, Raleigh/Durham, Richmond, Rochester)
  • US Airways Shuttle (Boston, Washington Reagan)

External Links

  • http://www.panynj.gov/aviation/lgaframe.HTM


Last updated: 11-08-2004 07:51:42