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Huntsville International Airport

Huntsville International Airport (IATA: HSV[3], ICAO: KHSV, FAA LID: HSV) (Carl T. Jones Field) is a public airport and spaceport ten miles southwest of downtown Huntsville, in Madison County, Alabama, United States. The FAA has designated the Huntsville International Airport as a Re-entry site for the Dream Chaser, a spaceplane operated by Sierra Space to make reentries from Low Earth Orbit (LEO).

Huntsville International Airport

Carl T. Jones Field
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerHuntsville / Madison County Airport Authority
ServesHuntsville, Alabama
Elevation AMSL629 ft / 192 m
Coordinates34°38′14″N 86°46′30″W / 34.63722°N 86.77500°W / 34.63722; -86.77500
Websiteflyhuntsville.com
Maps

FAA airport diagram
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
18R/36L 12,600 3,840 Asphalt
18L/36R 10,001 3,048 Asphalt
Statistics (2023)
Passengers1,473,629
Operations (year ending 6/30/2023)63,603
Drone Shot, HSV International Airport
Picture inside the Terminal, HSV Airport

The airport is part of the Port of Huntsville (along with the International Intermodal Center and Jetplex Industrial Park), and serves the Huntsville-Decatur Combined Statistical Area. Opened in October 1967 as the Huntsville Jetport, it was the third airport for Huntsville.[4][5] The airport has 12 gates with restrooms, shops, restaurants, phones and murals depicting aviation and space exploration scenes. The airport also has on a 3-star hotel on the premises.[6] The Four Points by Sheraton is located above the ticketing area and lobby, (adjacent to the terminal is a parking garage and to opposite sides are the control tower and a golf course).

The airport's west runway, at 12,600 ft (3,800 m), is the second longest commercial runway in the southeastern United States, being 400 ft (120 m) shorter than the longest runway at Miami International Airport. Huntsville is frequently used as a diversion airport from larger hubs in the Southeast, such as Atlanta, due to its long runways and sophisticated snow removal and de-icing equipment.[7]

The airport's "Fly Huntsville" marketing campaign encourages passengers to depart from Huntsville instead of driving to Birmingham or Nashville.[8] An August 2009 report by the Bureau of Transportation Statistics for the first quarter of 2009 revealed that Huntsville passengers paid, on average, was the highest airfares in the United States.[9] However, the airport reported that commercial airline passenger traffic increased 2.3% in January 2010 over the previous year.[10]

The National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015 called it a primary commercial service airport.[11] Federal Aviation Administration records say the airport had 612,690 passenger boardings (enplanements) in calendar year 2008,[12] 572,767 in 2009 and 606,127 in 2010.[13]

History edit

The original airport, Huntsville Flying Field/Mayfair Airport, was south of the city. It had sod runways, no lighting and opened in the early 1930s. By 1934 the airport had four dirt/sod runways, southwest of today's intersection of Whitesburg Drive and Bob Wallace Avenue.[14]

A second airport south of downtown opened in 1941 with two paved runways, Runway 18/36 being 4,000' long. The terminal building was a wooden shack at the northeast end of Runway 5/23; the National Weather Service opened at the municipal airport in 1958. The second airport was near today's intersection of Memorial Parkway and Airport Road; traces of runways and terminal facilities can be seen from the air.[15]

Huntsville's first scheduled jets were United 727s in late 1966. Carl T. Jones Field opened in 1967, west of the city along Highway 20 and County Line Road. A ribbon cutting ceremony was held 15 September 1968 with Dr. Wernher von Braun and Senator John Sparkman in attendance.

On July 10, 2018, the airport announced that Frontier Airlines would begin nonstop service to Denver and Orlando in October with the A320 Family. This marked the resumption of low-cost airline presence at the airport.

Airport facilities edit

The airport covers 6,000 acres (2,428 ha) at an elevation of 629 feet (192 m). It has two asphalt runways: 18R/36L is 12,600 by 150 feet (3,840 x 46 m) and 18L/36R is 10,001 by 150 feet (3,048 x 46 m).[16] In the year ending June 30, 2023, the airport had 63,603 aircraft operations which averaged about 174 flights per day.

Airlines and destinations edit

Huntsville International Airport is served by five passenger airlines including: American Airlines, Silver Airways, Breeze Airways, United Airlines, and Delta Air Lines.[17] Huntsville passenger airlines represent the biggest three international airline alliances in the world. Some services are flown by regional affiliates via code sharing agreements.

Huntsville International Airport serves Eight cargo airlines including: Cargolux, Latam Cargo, Atlas Air, DSV, Fedex Express, Qatar Airways Cargo, UPS and Kerry Logistics Network.[18]

Passenger edit

Cargo edit

 
Aerial Photo, HSV Airport

Statistics edit

Top destinations edit

Busiest domestic routes from HSV (April 2022 - March 2023)[20]
Rank Airport Passengers Carriers
1   Atlanta, Georgia 201,000 Delta
2   Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas 103,000 American
3   Charlotte, North Carolina 71,000 American
4   Washington–National, Virginia 68,000 American
5   Denver, Colorado 48,000 United
6   Houston–Intercontinental, Texas 39,000 United
7   Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois 32,000 American, United
8   Washington–Dulles, Virginia 16,000 United
9   Detroit, Michigan 14,000 Delta
10   Orlando, Florida 12,000 Breeze, Silver

Other statistics edit

Traffic by calendar year. Official ACI statistics.
Passengers Change from previous year
2010 1,247,475  6.5%
2011 1,263,272  1.3%
2012 1,187,710  6.0%
2013 1,040,278  12.4%
2014 1,075,713  3.4%
2015 1,069,830  0.5%
2016 1,079,028  0.9%
2017 1,063,538  1.4%
2018 1,184,374  11.4%
2019 1,445,365  20.9%
2020 559,420  61.3%
2021 940,830  122.8%
2022 1,201,105  27.7%
2023 1,473,629  22.7%
Airline Market Share (April 2022 - March 2023)
Rank Airline Passengers Market Share
1 Delta 386,000 31.10%
2 PSA 247,000 19.86%
3 SkyWest 220,000 17.70%
4 Envoy 100,000 8.04%
5 Commutair 72,000 5.78%
Other 218,000 17.53%

Past airline service edit

In 1969-80, Huntsville had nonstop or direct flights to Los Angeles, Florida and Texas during the U.S. space program. These flights served the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville.

In June 1967, Eastern Airlines introduced "The Space Corridor" linking Huntsville with St. Louis, Seattle and the NASA Kennedy Space Center in Florida.[21] In the June 13, 1967, timetable, Eastern Boeing 727-100s flew to St. Louis and on to Seattle, and nonstop to Orlando continuing to Melbourne, Florida, near the Kennedy Space Center. Eastern flew direct Douglas DC-9-30s to Houston, home of the NASA Johnson Space Center, via New Orleans in the late 1960s. Eastern had direct jets to Chicago during the early 1970s via Nashville. In April 1975, Eastern served Nashville, Orlando and St. Louis nonstop from Huntsville on 727s and DC-9s.[22]

In November 1967, Eastern scheduled nine departures each weekday from the new airport while United had four and Southern had 17.

United Airlines started nonstop Boeing 727-100s to Los Angeles in 1969. United first served Huntsville in 1961 when it acquired Capital Airlines which had scheduled Vickers Viscounts nonstop from Huntsville's old airport (at 34°41′10″N 86°35′20″W / 34.686°N 86.589°W / 34.686; -86.589) (1949 diagram) to Memphis, Knoxville and Washington, D.C., and direct to New York (LaGuardia and Newark) and Philadelphia. Until 1967, United used the same Viscounts, then introduced Boeing 727-100s into Huntsville in 1966. In April 1975, United served Greensboro, Knoxville, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., nonstop from Huntsville on 727s and 737s.[22] Raleigh/Durham service was added by 1979.[23] In August 1982, United had direct 727s to Los Angeles, San Francisco and Denver and nonstop Boeing 737-200s to Washington, D.C.

Southern Airways also served Huntsville. In the late 1960s, Southern introduced 75-seat Douglas DC-9-10s into their fleet which had consisted of 40-seat Martin 4-0-4. Southern's timetable in September 1968 listed nonstop jets to Atlanta, Memphis, New Orleans and Muscle Shoals, AL; Southern was still flying Martin 4-0-4s from Huntsville. In April 1975, Southern DC-9s flew nonstop to Atlanta, Chattanooga, Memphis, Montgomery, Muscle Shoals, Nashville, New Orleans and Orlando.[22] Southern had direct DC-9s to New York City (LaGuardia Airport), Washington, D,C. (Dulles Airport), Denver, St. Louis, Detroit and Wichita. In 1979, Southern merged with North Central Airlines to form Republic Airlines which continued to serve Huntsville, by that time having dropped Chattanooga and Montgomery service and having added Greenville/Spartanburg and Mobile/Pascagoula service.[23] Republic was acquired by Northwest Airlines which later merged with Delta Air Lines.

Service to Atlanta hit a high point in early 1985 when 17 nonstops a day flew HSV to ATL on four airlines, three flying "main line" jets. In the February 15, 1985, Official Airline Guide, Eastern Airlines had Boeing 727-100s and Douglas DC-9-50s, Republic Airlines was flying Douglas DC-9-10s, DC-9-30s and DC-9-50s, United Airlines flew 727-100s and Delta Connection, operated by Atlantic Southeast Airlines (ASA, which became ExpressJet), had de Havilland Canada DHC-7s and Shorts 360s. Today, Delta Air Lines and affiliate Delta Connection are the only airlines between Huntsville and Atlanta.

 
View of the new control tower

By 1989, the airport was linked to major airline hubs: Delta served Atlanta and Dallas/Fort Worth, Eastern served Atlanta, American served Dallas/Fort Worth and Nashville, Northwest served Memphis, and United served Chicago and Washington Dulles. United and American flew nonstop to Birmingham, United continued to fly nonstop to Knoxville, and Delta had a daily flight to Memphis.[24] United pulled out entirely by 1995, while USAir entered the market in the early 1990s with daily flights to Charlotte.[25]

Only Delta Air Lines operates main line jets to the airport now. Frontier previously had Airbus A320 service nonstop to Denver and Orlando. Delta operates Boeing 717 and McDonnell Douglas MD-88 aircraft to Atlanta. The airline previously flew Douglas DC-9-50s nonstop to Atlanta with some flights being flown by ExpressJet Canadair CRJ-700 and CRJ-200s as Delta Connection service to ATL; however, all services to ATL have been switched to mainline jets. The airport had service to New Orleans on GLO Airlines, but that ended after the airline filed for bankruptcy in 2017. Frontier Airlines ended service in 2022.

Expansion edit

 
View of the ramp

In 1989, Huntsville International became the first airport in the United States to install an ASR-9 dual-channel airport surveillance radar system.[26] and became one of five airports in the United States to use glass walled jet bridges.In 2015, Thyssenkrupp Airport Systems manufactured and installed new glass jet brides making Huntsville International Airport the first in the Southeast to enhance their facility by using all glass jet bridges.[27]

Currently, Huntsville International is undergoing major renovations on their runways and concourse facilities to meet the expected future demand and flow of passengers and goods.[28][29]

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On June 18, 2014, an IAI Westwind corporate aircraft crashed upon takeoff, killing all three on board.[30][31]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ FAA Airport Form 5010 for HSV PDF. Federal Aviation Administration. effective January 25, 2024.
  2. ^ "HSV Airport Statistics for 2023". flyhuntsville.com. Retrieved February 12, 2024.
  3. ^ "IATA Airport Code Search (HSV: Huntsville Intl)". International Air Transport Association. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  4. ^ "Huntsville's New Jetport Will Be First of Its Kind". The Tuscaloosa News. March 24, 1966. p. 5. Retrieved March 18, 2012.
  5. ^ Freeman, Paul. "Alabama: Huntsville area". Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields. Retrieved December 25, 2011.
  6. ^ "Four Points by Sheraton Huntsville Airport | Marriott Bonvoy". www.marriott.com. Retrieved 2023-12-31.
  7. ^ "Huntsville International Airport is prepared for diversions caused by winter weather". WHNT.com. 2017-01-08. Retrieved 2018-08-01.
  8. ^ Baskas, Harriet (March 12, 2008). "Better branding through music: Original airport theme songs". USA Today.
  9. ^ . WAAY-TV. Associated Press. August 4, 2009. Archived from the original on July 17, 2011.
  10. ^ Clines, Keith (February 10, 2010). . The Huntsville Times. Archived from the original on June 8, 2011.
  11. ^ (PDF). National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems. Federal Aviation Administration. October 4, 2010. Archived from the original (PDF, 2.03 MB) on September 27, 2012.
  12. ^ "Enplanements for CY 2008" (PDF, 1.0 MB). 2008 Passenger Boarding and All-Cargo Data. Federal Aviation Administration. December 18, 2009.
  13. ^ "Enplanements for CY 2010" (PDF, 189 KB). 2010 CY 2010 Passenger Boarding and All-Cargo Data. Federal Aviation Administration. October 4, 2011.
  14. ^ Freeman, Paul (June 24, 2018). "Huntsville Airport (1st location) / Huntsville Flying Field / Mayfair Airport, Huntsville, AL". Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields. Retrieved December 15, 2021.
  15. ^ Freeman, Paul (April 26, 2020). "Huntsville Airport (2nd location), Huntsville, AL". Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields. Retrieved December 15, 2021.
  16. ^ "HSV airport data at skyvector.com". skyvector.com. Retrieved September 11, 2022.
  17. ^ "Airline Info". Huntsville International Airport. Retrieved 2023-12-31.
  18. ^ "Port of Huntsville Maps". Port of Huntsville. Retrieved 2023-12-31.
  19. ^ "Breeze Airways wants a piece of your summer vacation budget with these 35 new routes across US". USA Today.
  20. ^ "Huntsville, AL: Huntsville International-Carl T Jones Field (HSV)". Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  21. ^ "Vintage Airline Aviation and Aerospace Ads - eastern-airlines-ad-space-corridor.jpg - Magazine Advertisement Picture Scans". aviationexplorer.com. Retrieved 2018-09-07.
  22. ^ a b c "HSV75p1". departedflights.com. Retrieved 2018-09-07.
  23. ^ a b "HSV79p1". departedflights.com. Retrieved 2018-09-07.
  24. ^ "HSV89p1". departedflights.com. Retrieved 2018-09-07.
  25. ^ "HSV95p1". departedflights.com. Retrieved 2018-09-07.
  26. ^ "Huntsville airport gets new radar system". The Tuscaloosa News. May 12, 1989. p. 7.
  27. ^ "Huntsville International Airport Unveils New Glass Jet Bridges – Quad Cities Daily". 2015-12-16. Retrieved 2023-12-31.
  28. ^ "HSV Builds". Huntsville International Airport. Retrieved 2023-12-31.
  29. ^ "Huntsville's Economic Future is Tied to our Airport's Success". Huntsville International Airport. 2019-08-20. Retrieved 2023-12-31.
  30. ^ Grass, Jonathan (June 18, 2014). "Plane crash at Huntsville International Airport claims 3 lives". The Huntsville Times. AL.com. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
  31. ^ Robinson, Carol; Davidson, Tiffany (June 19, 2014). "3 men killed in Wednesday plane crash identified". The Huntsville Times. AL.com. Retrieved June 19, 2014.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Aerial image as of March 2002[permanent dead link] from USGS The National Map
  • FAA Airport Diagram (PDF), effective January 25, 2024
  • FAA Terminal Procedures for HSV, effective January 25, 2024
  • Resources for this airport:
    • AirNav airport information for KHSV
    • ASN accident history for HSV
    • FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker
    • NOAA/NWS weather observations: current, past three days
    • SkyVector aeronautical chart for KHSV
    • FAA current HSV delay information


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For the airport in Huntsville Texas see Huntsville Regional Airport Huntsville International Airport IATA HSV 3 ICAO KHSV FAA LID HSV Carl T Jones Field is a public airport and spaceport ten miles southwest of downtown Huntsville in Madison County Alabama United States The FAA has designated the Huntsville International Airport as a Re entry site for the Dream Chaser a spaceplane operated by Sierra Space to make reentries from Low Earth Orbit LEO Huntsville International AirportCarl T Jones FieldNAIP 2006 orthophotoIATA HSVICAO KHSVFAA LID HSVWMO 72323SummaryAirport typePublicOwnerHuntsville Madison County Airport AuthorityServesHuntsville AlabamaElevation AMSL629 ft 192 mCoordinates34 38 14 N 86 46 30 W 34 63722 N 86 77500 W 34 63722 86 77500Websiteflyhuntsville wbr comMapsFAA airport diagramRunwaysDirection Length Surfaceft m18R 36L 12 600 3 840 Asphalt18L 36R 10 001 3 048 AsphaltStatistics 2023 Passengers1 473 629Operations year ending 6 30 2023 63 603Source Federal Aviation Administration 1 2 Drone Shot HSV International AirportPicture inside the Terminal HSV AirportThe airport is part of the Port of Huntsville along with the International Intermodal Center and Jetplex Industrial Park and serves the Huntsville Decatur Combined Statistical Area Opened in October 1967 as the Huntsville Jetport it was the third airport for Huntsville 4 5 The airport has 12 gates with restrooms shops restaurants phones and murals depicting aviation and space exploration scenes The airport also has on a 3 star hotel on the premises 6 The Four Points by Sheraton is located above the ticketing area and lobby adjacent to the terminal is a parking garage and to opposite sides are the control tower and a golf course The airport s west runway at 12 600 ft 3 800 m is the second longest commercial runway in the southeastern United States being 400 ft 120 m shorter than the longest runway at Miami International Airport Huntsville is frequently used as a diversion airport from larger hubs in the Southeast such as Atlanta due to its long runways and sophisticated snow removal and de icing equipment 7 The airport s Fly Huntsville marketing campaign encourages passengers to depart from Huntsville instead of driving to Birmingham or Nashville 8 An August 2009 report by the Bureau of Transportation Statistics for the first quarter of 2009 revealed that Huntsville passengers paid on average was the highest airfares in the United States 9 However the airport reported that commercial airline passenger traffic increased 2 3 in January 2010 over the previous year 10 The National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011 2015 called it a primary commercial service airport 11 Federal Aviation Administration records say the airport had 612 690 passenger boardings enplanements in calendar year 2008 12 572 767 in 2009 and 606 127 in 2010 13 Contents 1 History 2 Airport facilities 3 Airlines and destinations 3 1 Passenger 3 2 Cargo 4 Statistics 4 1 Top destinations 4 2 Other statistics 5 Past airline service 6 Expansion 7 Accidents and incidents 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editThe original airport Huntsville Flying Field Mayfair Airport was south of the city It had sod runways no lighting and opened in the early 1930s By 1934 the airport had four dirt sod runways southwest of today s intersection of Whitesburg Drive and Bob Wallace Avenue 14 A second airport south of downtown opened in 1941 with two paved runways Runway 18 36 being 4 000 long The terminal building was a wooden shack at the northeast end of Runway 5 23 the National Weather Service opened at the municipal airport in 1958 The second airport was near today s intersection of Memorial Parkway and Airport Road traces of runways and terminal facilities can be seen from the air 15 Huntsville s first scheduled jets were United 727s in late 1966 Carl T Jones Field opened in 1967 west of the city along Highway 20 and County Line Road A ribbon cutting ceremony was held 15 September 1968 with Dr Wernher von Braun and Senator John Sparkman in attendance On July 10 2018 the airport announced that Frontier Airlines would begin nonstop service to Denver and Orlando in October with the A320 Family This marked the resumption of low cost airline presence at the airport Airport facilities editThe airport covers 6 000 acres 2 428 ha at an elevation of 629 feet 192 m It has two asphalt runways 18R 36L is 12 600 by 150 feet 3 840 x 46 m and 18L 36R is 10 001 by 150 feet 3 048 x 46 m 16 In the year ending June 30 2023 the airport had 63 603 aircraft operations which averaged about 174 flights per day Airlines and destinations editHuntsville International Airport is served by five passenger airlines including American Airlines Silver Airways Breeze Airways United Airlines and Delta Air Lines 17 Huntsville passenger airlines represent the biggest three international airline alliances in the world Some services are flown by regional affiliates via code sharing agreements Huntsville International Airport serves Eight cargo airlines including Cargolux Latam Cargo Atlas Air DSV Fedex Express Qatar Airways Cargo UPS and Kerry Logistics Network 18 Passenger edit AirlinesDestinationsAmerican EagleCharlotte Chicago O Hare Dallas Fort Worth Washington National Seasonal MiamiBreeze AirwaysLas Vegas 19 Orlando TampaDelta Air LinesAtlantaDelta ConnectionAtlanta DetroitSilver AirwaysOrlandoUnited ExpressChicago O Hare Denver Houston Intercontinental Washington DullesCargo edit AirlinesDestinationsAtlas Air Ameriflight LouisvilleAnchorage Hong Kong Luxembourg MiamiCargoluxLuxembourgDSVLuxembourgFedEx FeederMemphisLATAM CargoUPS AirlinesFort Myers Louisville ShreveportDoha Qatar Airways Cargo nbsp Aerial Photo HSV AirportStatistics editTop destinations edit Busiest domestic routes from HSV April 2022 March 2023 20 Rank Airport Passengers Carriers1 nbsp Atlanta Georgia 201 000 Delta2 nbsp Dallas Fort Worth Texas 103 000 American3 nbsp Charlotte North Carolina 71 000 American4 nbsp Washington National Virginia 68 000 American5 nbsp Denver Colorado 48 000 United6 nbsp Houston Intercontinental Texas 39 000 United7 nbsp Chicago O Hare Illinois 32 000 American United8 nbsp Washington Dulles Virginia 16 000 United9 nbsp Detroit Michigan 14 000 Delta10 nbsp Orlando Florida 12 000 Breeze SilverOther statistics edit Traffic by calendar year Official ACI statistics Passengers Change from previous year2010 1 247 475 nbsp 6 5 2011 1 263 272 nbsp 1 3 2012 1 187 710 nbsp 6 0 2013 1 040 278 nbsp 12 4 2014 1 075 713 nbsp 3 4 2015 1 069 830 nbsp 0 5 2016 1 079 028 nbsp 0 9 2017 1 063 538 nbsp 1 4 2018 1 184 374 nbsp 11 4 2019 1 445 365 nbsp 20 9 2020 559 420 nbsp 61 3 2021 940 830 nbsp 122 8 2022 1 201 105 nbsp 27 7 2023 1 473 629 nbsp 22 7 Airline Market Share April 2022 March 2023 Rank Airline Passengers Market Share1 Delta 386 000 31 10 2 PSA 247 000 19 86 3 SkyWest 220 000 17 70 4 Envoy 100 000 8 04 5 Commutair 72 000 5 78 Other 218 000 17 53 Past airline service editIn 1969 80 Huntsville had nonstop or direct flights to Los Angeles Florida and Texas during the U S space program These flights served the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville In June 1967 Eastern Airlines introduced The Space Corridor linking Huntsville with St Louis Seattle and the NASA Kennedy Space Center in Florida 21 In the June 13 1967 timetable Eastern Boeing 727 100s flew to St Louis and on to Seattle and nonstop to Orlando continuing to Melbourne Florida near the Kennedy Space Center Eastern flew direct Douglas DC 9 30s to Houston home of the NASA Johnson Space Center via New Orleans in the late 1960s Eastern had direct jets to Chicago during the early 1970s via Nashville In April 1975 Eastern served Nashville Orlando and St Louis nonstop from Huntsville on 727s and DC 9s 22 In November 1967 Eastern scheduled nine departures each weekday from the new airport while United had four and Southern had 17 United Airlines started nonstop Boeing 727 100s to Los Angeles in 1969 United first served Huntsville in 1961 when it acquired Capital Airlines which had scheduled Vickers Viscounts nonstop from Huntsville s old airport at 34 41 10 N 86 35 20 W 34 686 N 86 589 W 34 686 86 589 1949 diagram to Memphis Knoxville and Washington D C and direct to New York LaGuardia and Newark and Philadelphia Until 1967 United used the same Viscounts then introduced Boeing 727 100s into Huntsville in 1966 In April 1975 United served Greensboro Knoxville Los Angeles and Washington D C nonstop from Huntsville on 727s and 737s 22 Raleigh Durham service was added by 1979 23 In August 1982 United had direct 727s to Los Angeles San Francisco and Denver and nonstop Boeing 737 200s to Washington D C Southern Airways also served Huntsville In the late 1960s Southern introduced 75 seat Douglas DC 9 10s into their fleet which had consisted of 40 seat Martin 4 0 4 Southern s timetable in September 1968 listed nonstop jets to Atlanta Memphis New Orleans and Muscle Shoals AL Southern was still flying Martin 4 0 4s from Huntsville In April 1975 Southern DC 9s flew nonstop to Atlanta Chattanooga Memphis Montgomery Muscle Shoals Nashville New Orleans and Orlando 22 Southern had direct DC 9s to New York City LaGuardia Airport Washington D C Dulles Airport Denver St Louis Detroit and Wichita In 1979 Southern merged with North Central Airlines to form Republic Airlines which continued to serve Huntsville by that time having dropped Chattanooga and Montgomery service and having added Greenville Spartanburg and Mobile Pascagoula service 23 Republic was acquired by Northwest Airlines which later merged with Delta Air Lines Service to Atlanta hit a high point in early 1985 when 17 nonstops a day flew HSV to ATL on four airlines three flying main line jets In the February 15 1985 Official Airline Guide Eastern Airlines had Boeing 727 100s and Douglas DC 9 50s Republic Airlines was flying Douglas DC 9 10s DC 9 30s and DC 9 50s United Airlines flew 727 100s and Delta Connection operated by Atlantic Southeast Airlines ASA which became ExpressJet had de Havilland Canada DHC 7s and Shorts 360s Today Delta Air Lines and affiliate Delta Connection are the only airlines between Huntsville and Atlanta nbsp View of the new control towerBy 1989 the airport was linked to major airline hubs Delta served Atlanta and Dallas Fort Worth Eastern served Atlanta American served Dallas Fort Worth and Nashville Northwest served Memphis and United served Chicago and Washington Dulles United and American flew nonstop to Birmingham United continued to fly nonstop to Knoxville and Delta had a daily flight to Memphis 24 United pulled out entirely by 1995 while USAir entered the market in the early 1990s with daily flights to Charlotte 25 Only Delta Air Lines operates main line jets to the airport now Frontier previously had Airbus A320 service nonstop to Denver and Orlando Delta operates Boeing 717 and McDonnell Douglas MD 88 aircraft to Atlanta The airline previously flew Douglas DC 9 50s nonstop to Atlanta with some flights being flown by ExpressJet Canadair CRJ 700 and CRJ 200s as Delta Connection service to ATL however all services to ATL have been switched to mainline jets The airport had service to New Orleans on GLO Airlines but that ended after the airline filed for bankruptcy in 2017 Frontier Airlines ended service in 2022 Expansion edit nbsp View of the rampIn 1989 Huntsville International became the first airport in the United States to install an ASR 9 dual channel airport surveillance radar system 26 and became one of five airports in the United States to use glass walled jet bridges In 2015 Thyssenkrupp Airport Systems manufactured and installed new glass jet brides making Huntsville International Airport the first in the Southeast to enhance their facility by using all glass jet bridges 27 Currently Huntsville International is undergoing major renovations on their runways and concourse facilities to meet the expected future demand and flow of passengers and goods 28 29 Accidents and incidents editOn June 18 2014 an IAI Westwind corporate aircraft crashed upon takeoff killing all three on board 30 31 See also editList of airports in AlabamaReferences edit FAA Airport Form 5010 for HSV PDF Federal Aviation Administration effective January 25 2024 HSV Airport Statistics for 2023 flyhuntsville com Retrieved February 12 2024 IATA Airport Code Search HSV Huntsville Intl International Air Transport Association Retrieved July 28 2013 Huntsville s New Jetport Will Be First of Its Kind The Tuscaloosa News March 24 1966 p 5 Retrieved March 18 2012 Freeman Paul Alabama Huntsville area Abandoned amp Little Known Airfields Retrieved December 25 2011 Four Points by Sheraton Huntsville Airport Marriott Bonvoy www marriott com Retrieved 2023 12 31 Huntsville International Airport is prepared for diversions caused by winter weather WHNT com 2017 01 08 Retrieved 2018 08 01 Baskas Harriet March 12 2008 Better branding through music Original airport theme songs USA Today Flights from Huntsville ranked most expensive WAAY TV Associated Press August 4 2009 Archived from the original on July 17 2011 Clines Keith February 10 2010 Passenger traffic at airport starts to climb The Huntsville Times Archived from the original on June 8 2011 2011 2015 NPIAS Report Appendix A PDF National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems Federal Aviation Administration October 4 2010 Archived from the original PDF 2 03 MB on September 27 2012 Enplanements for CY 2008 PDF 1 0 MB 2008 Passenger Boarding and All Cargo Data Federal Aviation Administration December 18 2009 Enplanements for CY 2010 PDF 189 KB 2010 CY 2010 Passenger Boarding and All Cargo Data Federal Aviation Administration October 4 2011 Freeman Paul June 24 2018 Huntsville Airport 1st location Huntsville Flying Field Mayfair Airport Huntsville AL Abandoned amp Little Known Airfields Retrieved December 15 2021 Freeman Paul April 26 2020 Huntsville Airport 2nd location Huntsville AL Abandoned amp Little Known Airfields Retrieved December 15 2021 HSV airport data at skyvector com skyvector com Retrieved September 11 2022 Airline Info Huntsville International Airport Retrieved 2023 12 31 Port of Huntsville Maps Port of Huntsville Retrieved 2023 12 31 Breeze Airways wants a piece of your summer vacation budget with these 35 new routes across US USA Today Huntsville AL Huntsville International Carl T Jones Field HSV Bureau of Transportation Statistics Retrieved June 11 2023 Vintage Airline Aviation and Aerospace Ads eastern airlines ad space corridor jpg Magazine Advertisement Picture Scans aviationexplorer com Retrieved 2018 09 07 a b c HSV75p1 departedflights com Retrieved 2018 09 07 a b HSV79p1 departedflights com Retrieved 2018 09 07 HSV89p1 departedflights com Retrieved 2018 09 07 HSV95p1 departedflights com Retrieved 2018 09 07 Huntsville airport gets new radar system The Tuscaloosa News May 12 1989 p 7 Huntsville International Airport Unveils New Glass Jet Bridges Quad Cities Daily 2015 12 16 Retrieved 2023 12 31 HSV Builds Huntsville International Airport Retrieved 2023 12 31 Huntsville s Economic Future is Tied to our Airport s Success Huntsville International Airport 2019 08 20 Retrieved 2023 12 31 Grass Jonathan June 18 2014 Plane crash at Huntsville International Airport claims 3 lives The Huntsville Times AL com Retrieved June 19 2014 Robinson Carol Davidson Tiffany June 19 2014 3 men killed in Wednesday plane crash identified The Huntsville Times AL com Retrieved June 19 2014 External links editOfficial website nbsp Aerial image as of March 2002 permanent dead link from USGS The National Map FAA Airport Diagram PDF effective January 25 2024 FAA Terminal Procedures for HSV effective January 25 2024 Resources for this airport AirNav airport information for KHSV ASN accident history for HSV FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker NOAA NWS weather observations current past three days SkyVector aeronautical chart for KHSV FAA current HSV delay information Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Huntsville International Airport amp oldid 1206592429, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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