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Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (IATA: DCA, ICAO: KDCA, FAA LID: DCA), referred to colloquially as Reagan Airport, Reagan National, its former name National Airport, or simply DCA, is an international airport in Arlington County, Virginia, across the Potomac River from Washington, D.C. It is the smaller of two commercial airports owned by the federal government and operated by the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority (MWAA) that serve the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area; the larger is Dulles International Airport about 25 miles (40 km) to the west in Fairfax and Loudoun counties.[2][8] The airport is 5 miles (8.0 km) from downtown Washington, D.C.

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
Aerial view of Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerUnited States federal government
OperatorMetropolitan Washington Airports Authority
ServesWashington, D.C. metropolitan area
LocationArlington County, Virginia, U.S.
OpenedJune 16, 1941; 82 years ago (1941-06-16) [1]
Hub forAmerican Airlines
OccupantsCoast Guard Air Station Washington
Elevation AMSL15 ft / 5 m
Coordinates38°51′8″N 77°2′16″W / 38.85222°N 77.03778°W / 38.85222; -77.03778
Websitewww.flyreagan.com
Maps

FAA's diagram of the airport
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
01/19 7,169 2,185 Asphalt
04/22 5,000 1,524 Asphalt
15/33 5,204 1,586 Asphalt
Statistics (2022)
Aircraft operations293,674
Total passengers23,961,442
Source: Federal Aviation Administration,[2] Passenger traffic[3]
Washington National Airport Terminal
and South Hangar Line
LocationThomas Ave.
Arlington County, Virginia, U.S.
Area861 acres (348 ha)[5][6]
Built1941 (1941), 83 years ago
Architectural styleModern
NRHP reference No.97001111[4]
VLR No.000-0045
Significant dates
Added to NRHPSeptember 12, 1997
Designated VLRJune 27, 1995[7]

The airport opened in 1941 and was originally named Washington National Airport. Part of the original terminal is still in use as Terminal 1. A larger second terminal, now known as Terminal 2, opened in 1997. In 1998, Congress passed, and President Bill Clinton signed a bill renaming it in honor of President Ronald Reagan.[9][10][11][12] MWAA operates the airport with close oversight by the federal government due to its proximity to the national capital.

Long distance flights to and from the airport are limited by a perimeter rule which generally prohibits flights longer than 1,250 statute miles (2,010 km) in any direction nonstop, in an effort to send coast-to-coast and overseas traffic to Dulles International Airport, though there are 40 slot exemptions to this rule. Planes are required to take unusually complicated paths to avoid restricted and prohibited airspace above sensitive landmarks, government buildings, and military installations in and around Washington, D.C.,[13] and comply with some of the tightest noise restrictions in the country.[14]

Reagan National currently[when?] serves 91 nonstop destinations and is a hub for American Airlines. Though it is an international airport, it has no immigration and customs facilities, with international flights restricted to those with U.S. Customs and Border Protection preclearance facilities, including major airports in Canada and some destinations in the Caribbean. International passenger flights to and from the Washington metropolitan area primarily utilize Washington Dulles International Airport or Baltimore/Washington International Airport. Reagan National is also home to Coast Guard Air Station Washington.

The airport served 24.5 million passengers in 2022, the most of any of the three airports serving the region, and a new passenger record for the airport.[15] The airport's main runway is the busiest in the nation.[16]

History edit

20th century edit

The first airport in the area was Arlington's Hoover Field, which opened in 1926.[17] Near the present site of The Pentagon, its single runway was crossed by a street; guards had to stop automobile traffic during takeoffs and landings. The following year, in 1927, Washington Airport, another privately operated field, began service next door.[1] In 1930, the Great Depression led the two terminals to merge to form Washington-Hoover Airport. Bordered on the east by U.S. Route 1, with its accompanying high-tension electrical wires, and obstructed by a high smokestack on one approach and a dump nearby, the field was inadequate.[18]

 
A 1935 drawing of the proposed site for the new airport, then known as Municipal Air Port
 
The airport's main terminal in July 1941
 
The airport's terminal in July 1941, seen from the apron with a taxiing Eastern Airlines Douglas DC-3 in the foreground
 
The airport's terminal as seen from the airfield in 1944
 
The airport in 1970
 
The National Mall and Downtown Washington, D.C. seen following a take off in March 2016

The need for a better airport was acknowledged in 37 studies conducted between 1926 and 1938,[1] but a statute prohibited federal development of airports. When Congress lifted the prohibition in 1938, President Franklin D. Roosevelt made a recess appropriation of $15 million to build National Airport by reallocating funds from other purposes. Construction of Washington National Airport began in 1940–1941 by a company led by John McShain. Congress challenged the legality of FDR's recess appropriation, but construction of the new airport continued.[19]

The airport is located southwest of Washington, D.C. in the Crystal City section of Arlington County, Virginia adjacent to National Landing. The western part of the airport was once within a large Virginia plantation, a remnant of which is now inside a historic site near the airport's Metrorail station.[20] The eastern part of the airport was built in the District of Columbia on and near mudflats in the tidal Potomac River near Gravelly Point, about 4 statute miles (6.4 km) from the United States Capitol, using landfill dredged from the Potomac River.

The airport opened June 16, 1941, just before U.S. entry into World War II.[1] The public was entertained by displays of wartime equipment including a captured Japanese Zero war prize flown in with U.S. Navy colors.[21] In 1945 Congress passed a law that established the airport was legally within Virginia, mainly for liquor sales taxation purposes, but under the jurisdiction of the federal government.[1] On July 1 of that year the airport's weather station became the official point for D.C. weather observations and records by the National Weather Service, in Washington, D.C.[22]

Until 1946, nonstop airline flights did not reach beyond New York City, Detroit, Cincinnati, Memphis, Atlanta, and Jacksonville. In 1946, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, and Miami were added; nonstops reached Denver in 1951 and Los Angeles in 1954. The April 1957 Official Airline Guide shows 316 weekday departures: 95 Eastern (plus six per week to/from South America), 77 American, 61 Capital, 23 National, 17 TWA, 10 United, 10 Delta, 6 Allegheny, 6 Braniff, 5 Piedmont, 3 Northeast and 3 Northwest. Jet flights began in April 1966 (727-200s were not allowed until 1970).[23] In 1974 the airport's key carriers were Eastern (20 destinations), United (14 destinations after subsuming Capital) and Allegheny (11 destinations).[24]

The grooving of runway 18–36 to improve traction when wet, in March 1967, was the first at a civil airport in the United States.[25]

Service to the airport's Metro station began in 1977.[26]

The Washington National Airport Terminal and South Hangar Line were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.[4][27]

Expansion and restrictions edit

The runway layout has changed little since the 1956 closure of the east–west runway at the south end of the field. Changes to the terminal complex over the years include:

  • Extension of the original Main Terminal (today's Terminal 1) to the south in 1950
  • The construction of a North Terminal supplemented the original terminal in 1958; construction connected the two terminals in 1961.
  • A United Airlines holdroom complex was built in 1965, a facility for American Airlines was completed in 1968, and a facility for Northwest Airlines and TWA (still in use today as the Terminal A concourse), along with a commuter terminal in 1970.[1]
  • The Metrorail station serving the Airport opened in 1977.
  • A major terminal expansion including a new air traffic control tower, officially called Terminals B/C, opened in 1997 giving the terminal its current configuration.
  • Runways 18/36 and 3/21 were renumbered as 1/19 and 4/22 in 1999 as Earth's magnetic field drifted.[28]
  • In March 2012 the main 1/19 runway was lengthened 300 feet (91 m) to add Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) compliant runway safety runoff areas.[29]

Despite the expansions, efforts have been made to restrict the growth of the airport. The advent of jets and traffic growth led Congress to pass the Washington Airport Act of 1950, which led to the opening of Dulles International Airport in 1962. To reduce congestion and drive traffic to alternative airports, the FAA imposed perimeter restrictions on National when jets arrived in 1966, and landing slot at DCA and four other high-density airports in 1969.[30]

The airport originally had no perimeter rule; from 1954 to 1960, piston-engine airliners flew nonstop to California.[31][32] Scheduled jet airliners were not allowed until April 1966, and concerns about aviation noise led to noise restrictions even before jet service began in 1966.

The perimeter rule was implemented in January 1966 as a voluntary agreement by airlines, to get permission to use short-haul jets at National. Dulles was to continue to serve the long haul markets, limiting traffic and noise at National; the FAA assumed that ground level noise would be reduced because planes would take off light on fuel and be up and away quickly. The agreement limited jet flights to 650 statute miles (1,050 km), with 7 grandfathered exceptions under 1,000 statute miles (1,600 km). The spirit of the agreement was regularly violated as flights left National to an airport within the perimeter and then immediately took off for a destination beyond it. Within a year there was a proposal to reduce the perimeter to 500 statute miles (800 km), but it was widely opposed and never implemented. Overcrowding at National was later managed by the 1969 High Density Rule, thereby removing one of the justifications for the perimeter agreement.[33]

In the 1960s and 1970s, several attempts were made to codify the perimeter rule, but it was not until Dulles was endangered that it actually become a strict rule. In 1970 the FAA lifted the ban at National of the stretched Boeing 727-200, which resulted in a lawsuit by Virginians for Dulles who argued that the airport's jet traffic was a nuisance. That suit resulted in a Court of Appeals order to create an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). In addition to the court order, there were economic problems at Dulles. Following the extension of Metrorail to National in 1977, and airline deregulation in 1978, traffic at Dulles began to plummet while it increased at National. As part of a slate of efforts to protect Dulles, including removing landing fees and mobile lounge user charges, the FAA proposed regulations as part of the EIS to limit traffic at National and maintain Dulles's role as the area's airport for long-haul destinations. In 1980, the FAA proposed codifying the perimeter rule as part of a larger rulemaking effort. When the rule was announced, airlines challenged it in court; the Metropolitan Washington Airports Policy of 1981 codified the perimeter rule on an interim basis "to maintain the long-haul nonstop service at Dulles and BWI which otherwise would preempt shorter haul service at National." At the same time, the perimeter was extended to 1,000 statute miles (1,600 km) miles to remove the unfairness of having seven grandfathered cities. The perimeter rule was upheld by the Court of Appeals in 1982.[34][33] In 1986, as part of the Metropolitan Washington Airports Act, which handed control of National over to the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, the perimeter was extended to 1,250 statute miles (2,010 km) to allow nonstop flights to Houston with Dallas also being permitted to be served nonstop.[33]

Slots at the airport have been traded in several instances. In 2011 US Airways acquired a number of Delta's slots at Reagan National in exchange for Delta receiving a number of US Airways slots at LaGuardia Airport in New York. JetBlue paid $40 million to acquire eight slot pairs at auction in the same year.[35] JetBlue and Southwest acquired 12 and 27 US Airways slot pairs, respectively, in 2014 as part of a government-mandated divestiture following the merger of US Airways and American.[36]

Flights normally use Runway 1/19 (7169' x 150' / 2185 m x 46 m), as the shorter Runways 15/33 and 4/22 can accommodate them only under very windy conditions.

Transfer of control and renaming edit

In 1984, the Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth Dole appointed a commission to study transferring National and Dulles Airports from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to a local entity, which could use airport revenues to finance improvements.[19] The commission recommended that one multi-state agency administer both Dulles and National, over the alternative of having Virginia control Dulles and the District of Columbia control National.[19] In 1987 Congress, through legislation,[37] transferred control of the airport from the FAA to the new Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority with the Authority's decisions being subject to a Congressional review panel. The constitutionality of the review panel was later challenged in the Supreme Court and the Court has twice declared the oversight panel unconstitutional.[38] Even after this decision, however, Congress has continued to intervene in the management of the airports.[39]

On February 6, 1998, President Bill Clinton signed legislation[40] changing the airport's name from Washington National Airport to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, to honor the former president on his 87th birthday.[41] The legislation[42] was drafted against the wishes of MWAA officials and political leaders in Northern Virginia and Washington, D.C.[43][44] Opponents of the renaming argued that a large federal office building had already been named for Reagan, the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, and that the airport was already named for George Washington, the first United States president.[44]

The bill stated that it did not require the expenditure of any funds to accomplish the name change; however, state, regional, and federal authorities were later required to change highway and transit signs at their own additional expense as new signs were made.[45][46]

21st century edit

In 2015, The Express conducted an online survey asking people what they call “the airport in Northern Virginia that’s not Dulles." The results found that only 31% of people referred to the airport as "Reagan" and only 12% as "Reagan National", compared to 57% dropping the former president from the name.[11] Political preference was shown to have a direct correlation with how people called the airport, with 72% of Republicans referring to the airport using "Reagan," while 64% of Democrats call it "National" or "DCA."[12]

Given that Washington, D.C., is one of the most Democratic cities in the United States, the dominant name does not feature the name "Reagan".[47]

Construction of current terminal buildings edit

 
Terminal 2 in 2014
 
The airport with the Crystal City section of Arlington County in the background
 
Washington, D.C. (background) and tracks for the Washington Metro (left)

With the addition of more flights and limited space in the aging main terminal, the airport began an extensive renovation and expansion in the 1990s. Hangar 11 on the northern end of the airport was converted into The USAir Interim Terminal, designed by Joseph C. Giuliani, FAIA. Soon after an addition for Delta Air Lines was added in 1989 and was later converted to Authority offices. These projects allowed for the relocation of several gates in the main terminal until the new $450 million terminal complex became operational. On July 27, 1997, the new terminal complex, Terminal 2, and two parking garages, opened. Argentine architect César Pelli designed the new terminals of the airport. The Interim Terminal closed immediately after its opening and was converted back into a hangar. One pier of the main terminal (now widely known as Terminal A), which mainly housed American Airlines and Pan Am, was demolished; the other pier, originally designed by Giuliani Associates Architects for Northwest and TWA remains operational today as gates A1–A9.

A land bridge is planned which would connect the airport with National Landing directly to Amazon HQ2.[48]

Operations edit

Perimeter restrictions edit

AirlinesDestinations
Alaska 10 slots operating as 2x Seattle/Tacoma, 1x Los Angeles, 1x Portland (OR), 1x San Francisco
American 12 slots operating as 2x Los Angeles, 3x Phoenix–Sky Harbor, 1x Las Vegas
Delta 4 slots operating as 1x Salt Lake City, 1x Los Angeles
Frontier 6 slots operating as 3x Denver
JetBlue 2 slots operating as 1x San Juan
Southwest 2 slots operating as 1x Austin
United 4 slots operating as 1x Denver, 1x San Francisco

Reagan National Airport is subject to a federally mandated perimeter limitation to keep it a short-haul airport and to keep most long-haul air traffic to Dulles International Airport.[49] The rule was implemented in 1966 and originally limited nonstop service to 650 statute miles (1,050 km), with some exceptions for previously existing service.[49] Congress extended the limit in the 1980s to 1,000 miles (1,600 km) and then again to 1,250 miles (2,010 km).[50] Congress and the United States Department of Transportation have created many "beyond-perimeter" exceptions that have weakened the rule.[50]

Members of Congress repeatedly have sought to extend the limit and permit exceptions in order to allow nonstop service from Reagan National Airport to their home states and districts.[51][52] In 1999, Senator John McCain of Arizona introduced legislation to remove the 1,250 statute miles (2,010 km) restriction.[53] In the end the restriction was not lifted, but in 2000 the FAA was permitted to add 24 exemptions, which went to Alaska Airlines for flights to Seattle–Tacoma International Airport. America West later obtained exemptions for non-stop flights to Phoenix in 2004. In May 2012, the DOT granted new exemptions for Alaska to serve Portland, JetBlue to serve San Juan, Southwest to serve Austin and Virgin America to serve San Francisco. American, Delta, United and US Airways were also each allowed to exchange a pair of in-perimeter slots for an equal number of beyond-perimeter slots.[54]

In 2023, representatives Chip Roy and Greg Casar, both of Austin, initiated a new bipartisan proposal to amend the perimeter under an FAA reauthorization bill; the current 1,250 mi perimeter passes through central Texas, giving the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex and Greater Houston access to Reagan while excluding Austin, El Paso and San Antonio, although Austin has a single daily nonstop flight under an exemption. Delta, Texas business interests, and Texas senator Ted Cruz back the amendment, while American Airlines and others oppose it, citing an FAA memo and statistics showing that Reagan has a high rate of delays and that additional flights may exceed its capacity.[55]

Approach patterns edit

 
Many pilots regard the Potomac River approach pattern at Reagan National Airport as one of the more interesting landing approaches in the United States[56]

Reagan National Airport has some of the strictest noise restrictions in the country.[14] In addition, due to security concerns, the areas surrounding the National Mall and U.S. Naval Observatory in central Washington are prohibited airspace up to 18,000 feet (5,500 m). Due to these restrictions, pilots approaching from the north are generally required to follow the path of the Potomac River and turn just before landing. This approach is known as the River Visual. Similarly, flights taking off to the north are required to climb quickly and turn left.[57][58]

The River Visual airport approach is only possible with a ceiling of at least 3,500 feet (1,100 m) and visibility of 3 statute miles (4.8 km) or more.[59] There are lights on the Key Bridge, Theodore Roosevelt Bridge, Arlington Memorial Bridge and the George Mason Memorial Bridge to aid pilots following the river. Aircraft using the approach can be observed from various parks on the river's west bank. Passengers on the left side of an airplane can see the Capitol, the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial, the Jefferson Memorial, the World War II Memorial, Georgetown University, the National Mall, portions of Downtown Washington, D.C. (including the roof of Capital One Arena), and the White House. Passengers on the right side can see CIA headquarters, Arlington National Cemetery, the Pentagon, eastern Arlington, including portions of Rosslyn, Clarendon, Ballston, Crystal City, and the United States Air Force Memorial.

 
Boeing flew a 787-8 Dreamliner into DCA in 2011. It is one of the only wide-body aircraft to ever land at the airport.

When the River Visual is not available due to visibility or winds, aircraft may fly an offset localizer or GPS approach to Runway 19 along a similar course (flying a direct approach course on instruments as far as Rosslyn, and then turning to align with the runway visually moments before touchdown). Most airliners are also capable of performing a VOR or GPS approach to the shorter Runway 15/33. Northbound visual and ILS approaches to Runway 1 are also sometimes used; these approaches follow the Potomac River from the south and overfly the Woodrow Wilson Bridge.[60]

Special security measures edit

In 1938, Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order No. 7910, creating the first restricted airspace around the District of Columbia. This would be superseded by a number of executive orders clarifying the boundaries of the airspace until 1966, when it was codified into Title 14, Code of Federal Regulations, part 73. Title 14 created Prohibited Airspace 56 A and B (P-56A and P-56B). P-56A restricted flight around the National Mall, White House, and United States Capitol Building, while P-56B restricted flight in a half-mile radius from the center of the U.S. Naval Observatory. Only aircraft supporting the United States Secret Service, Office of the President, or some government agencies are permitted within the prohibited airspace.[61]

In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, attacks, a Flight-Restricted Zone (FRZ) was put into effect. Extending approximately 15 nautical miles (or roughly 17 miles) around the airport, only scheduled commercial flights and governmental flights are allowed into the zone without a waiver from the Federal Aviation Administration. Charter flights for the U.S. government are permitted to land at the airport and Joint Base Andrews under certain conditions.[62]

After the September 11 attacks, the airport was closed for several weeks, and security was tightened when it reopened. Increased security measures included:

  • A ban on aircraft with more than 156 seats (lifted in April 2002)[63]
  • A ban on the "River Visual" approach (lifted in April 2002)[63]
  • A requirement that, 30 minutes prior to landing or following takeoff, passengers were required to remain seated; if anyone stood up, the aircraft was to be diverted to Washington Dulles International Airport under military escort and the person standing would be detained and questioned by federal law enforcement officials (lifted in July 2005)[64]
  • A ban on general aviation (lifted in October 2005, subject to the restrictions below)[65]

On October 18, 2005, National Airport was reopened to general aviation on a limited basis (48 operations per day) and under restrictions: passenger and crew manifests must be submitted to the Transportation Security Administration 24 hours in advance, and all planes must pass through one of roughly 70 "gateway airports"[66] where re-inspections of aircraft, passengers, and baggage take place. An armed security officer must be on board before departing a gateway airport.[67] On March 23, 2011, the air traffic control supervisor on duty reportedly fell asleep during the night shift. Two aircraft on approach to the airport were unable to contact anyone in the control tower and landed unassisted.[68]

Terminals and facilities edit

 
National Hall in Terminal 2

DCA has 59 gates with jetways: 9 gates in Terminal 1 and 50 gates in Terminal 2 (13 gates in Concourse B, 12 in Concourse C, 11 in Concourse D and 14 in the new Concourse E).[69] The two terminals are not connected to each other post-security. A new terminal and gate numbering scheme was implemented in 2022. Previously Terminal 1 was Terminal A, and Terminal 2 was Terminal B/C, as it is one building. All gates also now have a letter, A through E for each of the five concourses. Therefore, Gate 33 became Gate C33. Other changes include B Parking and C Parking, becoming Parking 2 South and Parking 2 North.[70]

Terminal 1 edit

 
Gate area of Terminal 1

Designed by architect Charles M. Goodman, terminal 1 opened in 1941 and was expanded in 1955 to accommodate more passengers and airlines. The exterior of this terminal has had its original architecture restored, with the airside façade restored in 2004 and the landside façade restored in 2008.[71] The terminal underwent a $37 million renovation that modernized the airport's look by bringing in brighter lighting, more windows, and new flooring. The project was completed in 2014 along with a new expanded TSA security checkpoint.[72] In 2014, additional renovations were announced including new upgraded concessions and further structural improvements, the project was completed in 2015.[73] Terminal 1 contains gates A1–A9 and houses operations from Air Canada Express, Frontier, and Southwest, with Southwest having the largest presence in Terminal 1.

Terminal 2 edit

 
Inside the departure area

Terminal 2 is the airport's newest and largest terminal; the terminal opened in 1997 and replaced a collection of airline-specific terminals built during the 1960s. The new terminal (Concourses B-D) was designed by architect Cesar Pelli and houses 35 gates. The terminal is directly connected to the WMATA airport station via indoor pedestrian bridges. Concourse E, which expanded Terminal 2, opened in 2021 as a replacement for Gate 35X, which was a bus gate.[74][75]

Terminals 2 has four concourses. Concourse B (Gates B10–B22) houses Alaska Airlines, Delta, and United. Concourse C (Gates C23–C34) houses American and JetBlue. Concourse D (Gates D35–D45) is exclusive to American for their hub at DCA along with Concourse E (Gates E46–E59) that houses American Eagle and American.[76] The corridor/hall connecting the four concourses of Terminal 2 is known as National Hall. Concourse B houses a Delta Sky Club and United Club, and there are three American Admirals Clubs in Terminal 2.[77] The Delta Sky Club was renovated in summer 2018.[78]

Lounges edit

There are currently six airport lounges at the airport in all the Terminals. There are three American Airlines Admirals Clubs: one near gate C24 in concourse C, one in concourse D near gate D36, and one in Concourse E near gate E47. In concourse B there is a Delta Sky Club near gate B15, and a United Club near gate B10.[79] In Terminal 1 there is a USO lounge for retired and active military members pre-security. Originally scheduled for 2022, an American Express Centurion Lounge is scheduled to open in terminal 2 in 2023[80] by door 1 on the ticketing level.[81] A Capital One lounge is also scheduled to open in 2023.[82]

Project Journey edit

MWAA began construction of a new concourse north of Terminal 2 in February 2018 to accommodate 14 new regional jet gates with jetways, bringing the total number of gates at DCA to 60. This replaced "Gate 35X," a bus gate formerly used to bring passengers to and from American Eagle flights that used parking spots on the ramp. Officially called Project Journey, construction was completed on April 20, 2021.[74][75]

In addition, the individual security checkpoints for the four concourses in Terminal 2 were replaced with higher-capacity security checkpoints in two new buildings to the west of National Hall, located next to the two Metro station pedestrian bridges, and in between the two existing arrivals and departures roadways, placing all of National Hall within the secured area of the airport and allowing passengers to walk between concourses without re-clearing security.[74] The new checkpoints were opened on November 9, 2021.[83]

Ground transportation edit

 
Reagan National station of the Washington Metro connects the airport to the surrounding region via rail.

The Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport station on the Washington Metro, served by the Yellow and Blue lines, is located on an elevated outdoor platform station adjacent to Terminal 2. Two elevated pedestrian walkways connect the station directly to the concourse levels of Terminal 2. An underground pedestrian walkway and shuttle services provide access to Terminal 1.[84]

Metrobus provides service on weekend mornings before the Metro station opens or during any disruptions to regular Metro service.[citation needed]

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport is located on the George Washington Memorial Parkway, and connected to U.S. Route 1 by the Airport Viaduct (State Route 233). Interstate 395 is just north of the airport, and is also accessible by the G.W. Parkway and U.S. Route 1.[85] Airport-operated parking garage facilities as well as economy lots are available adjacent to or near the various airport terminals.

The airport is accessible by bicycle and foot from the Mount Vernon Trail, as well as the sidewalk along the Airport Viaduct (State Route 233), which connects the airport grounds to U.S. Route 1. A total of 48 bike parking spots are available across six separate bike racks. The airport has a Capital Bikeshare station,[86] making this the first major airport in the United States to have a dock-based bikeshare station.[87]

Airlines and destinations edit

AirlinesDestinationsRefs
Air Canada Express Montréal–Trudeau, Ottawa, Toronto–Pearson [88]
Alaska Airlines Los Angeles, Portland (OR), San Francisco, Seattle/Tacoma [89]
American Airlines Atlanta, Boston, Charlotte, Chicago–O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Fort Lauderdale,[90] Fort Myers, Indianapolis, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York–LaGuardia, Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Raleigh/Durham, Tampa
Seasonal: Bangor, Bermuda (resumes April 4, 2024),[91] Burlington (VT), Charleston (SC), Columbus–Glenn, Destin/Fort Walton Beach, Hartford, Jacksonville (FL), Kansas City, Myrtle Beach, Nashville, Nassau, Panama City (FL), Pensacola, Pittsburgh, Portland (ME), Sarasota, Savannah, St. Louis, Syracuse, West Palm Beach
[92]
American Eagle Akron/Canton, Albany (NY), Asheville, Augusta (GA), Bangor, Baton Rouge, Birmingham (AL), Buffalo, Burlington (VT), Cedar Rapids/Iowa City, Charleston (SC), Charleston (WV), Chattanooga, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbia (SC), Columbus–Glenn, Dayton, Des Moines, Detroit, Fayetteville/Bentonville, Grand Rapids, Greensboro, Greenville/Spartanburg, Hartford, Huntsville, Jackson (MS), Jacksonville (FL), Kansas City, Key West, Knoxville, Lansing, Little Rock, Louisville, Madison, Manchester (NH), Memphis, Milwaukee,[93] Minneapolis/St. Paul, Montgomery, Myrtle Beach, Nashville, New York–JFK, Norfolk, Oklahoma City, Panama City (FL), Pensacola, Pittsburgh, Portland (ME), Providence, Raleigh/Durham, Rochester (NY), Sarasota, Savannah, St. Louis, Syracuse, Tallahassee, Toronto–Pearson, Tulsa, West Palm Beach, White Plains, Wichita,[94] Wilmington (NC)
Seasonal: Daytona Beach, Destin/Fort Walton Beach, Halifax, Hilton Head, Hyannis (begins June 22, 2024),[95] Martha's Vineyard, Melbourne/Orlando, Nantucket, Nassau, New Bern, Traverse City
[92]
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York–JFK, New York–LaGuardia, Orlando, Salt Lake City [96]
Delta Connection Boston, Cincinnati, Lexington, Madison, Nashville, New York–JFK, New York–LaGuardia, Omaha, Raleigh/Durham [96]
Frontier Airlines Denver [97]
JetBlue Boston, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers, Nassau, Orlando, San Juan, West Palm Beach
Seasonal: Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket
[98]
Southwest Airlines Atlanta, Austin, Chicago–Midway, Columbus–Glenn, Dallas–Love, Fort Lauderdale, Houston–Hobby, Kansas City, Milwaukee, Nashville, New Orleans, Oklahoma City, Omaha, Orlando, Providence, St. Louis, Tampa
Seasonal: Albany,[99] Fort Myers, Memphis,[99] Sarasota
[100]
United Airlines Chicago–O'Hare, Denver, Houston–Intercontinental, San Francisco [101]
United Express Chicago–O'Hare, Houston–Intercontinental, Newark [101]

Statistics edit

Top destinations edit

Busiest domestic routes from DCA (November 2022 - October 2023)[102]
Rank Airport Passengers Carriers
1   Atlanta, Georgia 780,000 American, Delta, Southwest
2   Boston, Massachusetts 778,000 American, Delta, JetBlue
3   Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois 693,000 American, United
4   Orlando, Florida 538,000 American, JetBlue, Southwest
5   Miami, Florida 455,000 American
6   Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas 440,000 American
7   New York–LaGuardia, New York 377,000 American, Delta
8   Charlotte, North Carolina 335,000 American
9   Fort Lauderdale, Florida 308,000 American, JetBlue, Southwest
10   Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota 264,000 American, Delta

Airline market share edit

Largest airlines at DCA (November 2022 – October 2023)[103]
Rank Airline Passengers Market share
1 American Airlines 6,929,000 28.76%
2 Southwest Airlines 3,496,000 14.51%
3 Delta Air Lines 2,154,000 8.94%
4 JetBlue Airways 1,825,000 7.57%
5 United Airlines 1,246,000 5.17%
Other 8,447,000 35.05%

Annual traffic edit

Annual passenger traffic at DCA airport. See Wikidata query.
Annual passenger traffic at DCA, 1991–present[104]
Year Passengers Year Passengers Year Passengers Year Passengers
2000 15,888,199 2010 18,118,713 2020 7,574,966 2030
1999 15,185,348 2009 17,577,359 2019 23,945,527 2029
1998 15,970,306 2008 18,028,287 2018 23,464,618 2028
1997 15,907,006 2007 18,679,343 2017 23,903,248 2027
1996 15,226,500 2006 18,550,785 2016 23,595,006 2026
1995 15,506,244 2005 17,847,884 2015 23,039,429 2025
1994 15,700,825 2004 15,944,542 2014 20,810,387 2024
1993 16,307,808 2003 14,223,123 2013 20,415,085 2023
1992 15,593,535 2002 12,881,601 2012 19,655,440 2022 23,961,442
1991 15,098,697 2001 13,265,387 2011 18,823,094 2021 14,044,724

Abingdon plantation historical site edit

A part of the airport is located on the former site of the 18th and 19th century Abingdon plantation, which was associated with the prominent Alexander, Custis, Stuart, and Hunter families.[105] In 1998, MWAA opened a historical display around the restored remnants of two Abingdon buildings and placed artifacts collected from the site in an exhibit hall in Terminal A.[106][107] The Abingdon site is located on a knoll between parking Garage A and Garage B/C, near the south end of the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Metrorail station.[106][108][109][110]

Accidents and incidents edit

Page Airways edit

On April 27, 1945, a Page Airways Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar on a charter flight[111] crashed into a deep ditch at the end of runway 33 after aborting a takeoff due to engine failure. There were strong gusts and ground turbulence at the time. Out of the 13 passengers and crew on board, six passengers were killed.[112] Although a contemporary newspaper report indicated that the flight's intended destination had been Rochester, New York,[111] the Civil Aeronautics Board's accident investigation report stated that the destination had been New York, N.Y.[112]

Eastern Air Lines Flight 537 edit

On November 1, 1949, a mid-air collision between an Eastern Air Lines passenger aircraft and a P-38 Lightning military plane took the lives of 55 passengers. The sole survivor was the Bolivian pilot of the fighter plane, Erick Rios Bridoux.[113]

Bridoux's plane had taken off from National just 10 minutes earlier and was in contact with the tower during a brief test flight. The Eastern Air Lines DC-4 was on approach from the south when the nimble and much faster P-38 banked and plunged right into the passenger plane. Both aircraft dropped into the Potomac River.

Capital Airlines Flight 500 edit

On December 12, 1949, Capital Airlines Flight 500, a Douglas DC-3, stalled and crashed into the Potomac River while on approach to Washington National. Six of the 23 passengers and crew on board were killed.[114]

Air Florida Flight 90 edit

 
The tail of Air Florida Flight 90 being raised from the Potomac River following its January 13, 1982, crash

On the afternoon of January 13, 1982,[115] following a period of exceptionally cold weather and a morning of blizzard conditions, Air Florida Flight 90 crashed after waiting 49 minutes on a taxiway and taking off with ice and snow on the wings. The Boeing 737 aircraft failed to gain altitude. Less than 1 statute mile (1.6 km) from the end of the runway, the airplane struck the 14th Street Bridge complex, shearing the tops off vehicles stuck in traffic before plunging through the 1-inch-thick (25 mm) ice covering the Potomac River. Rescue responses were greatly hampered by the weather and traffic. Due to action on the part of motorists, a United States Park Service police helicopter crew, and one of the plane's passengers who later died, five occupants of the downed plane survived. The other 74 people who were aboard and four occupants of vehicles on the bridge were killed. President Ronald Reagan praised motorist Lenny Skutnik in his State of the Union Address a few weeks later.

References edit

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External links edit

  • Official website  
  •   This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency
  • Airport Map Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority. June 2011
  • Historic American Engineering Record documentation:
    • HAER No. VA-51-A, "Washington National Airport, Hangar No. 1", 30 photos, 9 data pages, 2 photo caption pages
    • HAER No. VA-51-B, "Washington National Airport, Air Transport Command, Passenger Terminal/Operations Building", 25 photos, 23 data pages, 3 photo caption pages
    • HAER No. VA-51-C, "Washington National Airport, Air Transport Command, Portable Hangar", 11 photos, 9 data pages, 3 photo caption pages
    • HAER No. VA-51-D, "Washington National Airport, Hangar Nos. 8, 9, 11, and 12", 23 photos, 13 data pages, 5 photo caption pages
    • HAER No. VA-82, "North Airport Entry Underpass, George Washington Memorial Parkway at National Airport", 2 data pages
    • HAER No. VA-84, "South Airport Exit Overpass, George Washington Memorial Parkway at National Airport", 2 data pages
    • HAER No. VA-85, "Route 1-National Airport Overpass, George Washington Memorial Parkway at Route 1, National Airport", 2 data pages
    • HAER No. VA-92, "Original Airport Entrance Overpass, Spanning original Airport Entrance Road at National Airport", 6 photos, 3 data pages, 1 photo caption page
  • KDCA - Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport at airnav.com
  • FAA Airport Diagram (PDF), effective January 25, 2024
  • FAA Terminal Procedures for DCA, effective January 25, 2024
  • Resources for this airport:
    • AirNav airport information for KDCA
    • ASN accident history for DCA
    • FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker
    • NOAA/NWS weather observations: current, past three days
    • SkyVector aeronautical chart for KDCA
    • FAA current DCA delay information

ronald, reagan, washington, national, airport, metro, station, station, iata, icao, kdca, referred, colloquially, reagan, airport, reagan, national, former, name, national, airport, simply, international, airport, arlington, county, virginia, across, potomac, . For the Metro station see Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport station Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport IATA DCA ICAO KDCA FAA LID DCA referred to colloquially as Reagan Airport Reagan National its former name National Airport or simply DCA is an international airport in Arlington County Virginia across the Potomac River from Washington D C It is the smaller of two commercial airports owned by the federal government and operated by the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority MWAA that serve the Washington D C metropolitan area the larger is Dulles International Airport about 25 miles 40 km to the west in Fairfax and Loudoun counties 2 8 The airport is 5 miles 8 0 km from downtown Washington D C Ronald Reagan Washington National AirportAerial view of Ronald Reagan Washington National AirportIATA DCAICAO KDCAFAA LID DCAWMO 72405SummaryAirport typePublicOwnerUnited States federal governmentOperatorMetropolitan Washington Airports AuthorityServesWashington D C metropolitan areaLocationArlington County Virginia U S OpenedJune 16 1941 82 years ago 1941 06 16 1 Hub forAmerican AirlinesOccupantsCoast Guard Air Station WashingtonElevation AMSL15 ft 5 mCoordinates38 51 8 N 77 2 16 W 38 85222 N 77 03778 W 38 85222 77 03778Websitewww wbr flyreagan wbr comMapsFAA s diagram of the airportRunwaysDirection Length Surfaceft m01 19 7 169 2 185 Asphalt04 22 5 000 1 524 Asphalt15 33 5 204 1 586 AsphaltStatistics 2022 Aircraft operations293 674Total passengers23 961 442Source Federal Aviation Administration 2 Passenger traffic 3 Washington National Airport Terminaland South Hangar LineU S National Register of Historic PlacesVirginia Landmarks RegisterShow map of VirginiaShow map of the United StatesLocationThomas Ave Arlington County Virginia U S Area861 acres 348 ha 5 6 Built1941 1941 83 years agoArchitectural styleModernNRHP reference No 97001111 4 VLR No 000 0045Significant datesAdded to NRHPSeptember 12 1997Designated VLRJune 27 1995 7 The airport opened in 1941 and was originally named Washington National Airport Part of the original terminal is still in use as Terminal 1 A larger second terminal now known as Terminal 2 opened in 1997 In 1998 Congress passed and President Bill Clinton signed a bill renaming it in honor of President Ronald Reagan 9 10 11 12 MWAA operates the airport with close oversight by the federal government due to its proximity to the national capital Long distance flights to and from the airport are limited by a perimeter rule which generally prohibits flights longer than 1 250 statute miles 2 010 km in any direction nonstop in an effort to send coast to coast and overseas traffic to Dulles International Airport though there are 40 slot exemptions to this rule Planes are required to take unusually complicated paths to avoid restricted and prohibited airspace above sensitive landmarks government buildings and military installations in and around Washington D C 13 and comply with some of the tightest noise restrictions in the country 14 Reagan National currently when serves 91 nonstop destinations and is a hub for American Airlines Though it is an international airport it has no immigration and customs facilities with international flights restricted to those with U S Customs and Border Protection preclearance facilities including major airports in Canada and some destinations in the Caribbean International passenger flights to and from the Washington metropolitan area primarily utilize Washington Dulles International Airport or Baltimore Washington International Airport Reagan National is also home to Coast Guard Air Station Washington The airport served 24 5 million passengers in 2022 the most of any of the three airports serving the region and a new passenger record for the airport 15 The airport s main runway is the busiest in the nation 16 Contents 1 History 1 1 20th century 1 2 Expansion and restrictions 1 3 Transfer of control and renaming 1 4 21st century 1 5 Construction of current terminal buildings 2 Operations 2 1 Perimeter restrictions 2 2 Approach patterns 2 3 Special security measures 3 Terminals and facilities 3 1 Terminal 1 3 2 Terminal 2 3 3 Lounges 3 4 Project Journey 3 5 Ground transportation 4 Airlines and destinations 5 Statistics 5 1 Top destinations 5 2 Airline market share 5 3 Annual traffic 6 Abingdon plantation historical site 7 Accidents and incidents 7 1 Page Airways 7 2 Eastern Air Lines Flight 537 7 3 Capital Airlines Flight 500 7 4 Air Florida Flight 90 8 References 9 External linksHistory edit20th century edit The first airport in the area was Arlington s Hoover Field which opened in 1926 17 Near the present site of The Pentagon its single runway was crossed by a street guards had to stop automobile traffic during takeoffs and landings The following year in 1927 Washington Airport another privately operated field began service next door 1 In 1930 the Great Depression led the two terminals to merge to form Washington Hoover Airport Bordered on the east by U S Route 1 with its accompanying high tension electrical wires and obstructed by a high smokestack on one approach and a dump nearby the field was inadequate 18 nbsp A 1935 drawing of the proposed site for the new airport then known as Municipal Air Port nbsp The airport s main terminal in July 1941 nbsp The airport s terminal in July 1941 seen from the apron with a taxiing Eastern Airlines Douglas DC 3 in the foreground nbsp The airport s terminal as seen from the airfield in 1944 nbsp The airport in 1970 nbsp The National Mall and Downtown Washington D C seen following a take off in March 2016The need for a better airport was acknowledged in 37 studies conducted between 1926 and 1938 1 but a statute prohibited federal development of airports When Congress lifted the prohibition in 1938 President Franklin D Roosevelt made a recess appropriation of 15 million to build National Airport by reallocating funds from other purposes Construction of Washington National Airport began in 1940 1941 by a company led by John McShain Congress challenged the legality of FDR s recess appropriation but construction of the new airport continued 19 The airport is located southwest of Washington D C in the Crystal City section of Arlington County Virginia adjacent to National Landing The western part of the airport was once within a large Virginia plantation a remnant of which is now inside a historic site near the airport s Metrorail station 20 The eastern part of the airport was built in the District of Columbia on and near mudflats in the tidal Potomac River near Gravelly Point about 4 statute miles 6 4 km from the United States Capitol using landfill dredged from the Potomac River The airport opened June 16 1941 just before U S entry into World War II 1 The public was entertained by displays of wartime equipment including a captured Japanese Zero war prize flown in with U S Navy colors 21 In 1945 Congress passed a law that established the airport was legally within Virginia mainly for liquor sales taxation purposes but under the jurisdiction of the federal government 1 On July 1 of that year the airport s weather station became the official point for D C weather observations and records by the National Weather Service in Washington D C 22 Until 1946 nonstop airline flights did not reach beyond New York City Detroit Cincinnati Memphis Atlanta and Jacksonville In 1946 Boston Chicago Dallas and Miami were added nonstops reached Denver in 1951 and Los Angeles in 1954 The April 1957 Official Airline Guide shows 316 weekday departures 95 Eastern plus six per week to from South America 77 American 61 Capital 23 National 17 TWA 10 United 10 Delta 6 Allegheny 6 Braniff 5 Piedmont 3 Northeast and 3 Northwest Jet flights began in April 1966 727 200s were not allowed until 1970 23 In 1974 the airport s key carriers were Eastern 20 destinations United 14 destinations after subsuming Capital and Allegheny 11 destinations 24 The grooving of runway 18 36 to improve traction when wet in March 1967 was the first at a civil airport in the United States 25 Service to the airport s Metro station began in 1977 26 The Washington National Airport Terminal and South Hangar Line were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997 4 27 Expansion and restrictions edit The runway layout has changed little since the 1956 closure of the east west runway at the south end of the field Changes to the terminal complex over the years include Extension of the original Main Terminal today s Terminal 1 to the south in 1950 The construction of a North Terminal supplemented the original terminal in 1958 construction connected the two terminals in 1961 A United Airlines holdroom complex was built in 1965 a facility for American Airlines was completed in 1968 and a facility for Northwest Airlines and TWA still in use today as the Terminal A concourse along with a commuter terminal in 1970 1 The Metrorail station serving the Airport opened in 1977 A major terminal expansion including a new air traffic control tower officially called Terminals B C opened in 1997 giving the terminal its current configuration Runways 18 36 and 3 21 were renumbered as 1 19 and 4 22 in 1999 as Earth s magnetic field drifted 28 In March 2012 the main 1 19 runway was lengthened 300 feet 91 m to add Federal Aviation Administration FAA compliant runway safety runoff areas 29 Despite the expansions efforts have been made to restrict the growth of the airport The advent of jets and traffic growth led Congress to pass the Washington Airport Act of 1950 which led to the opening of Dulles International Airport in 1962 To reduce congestion and drive traffic to alternative airports the FAA imposed perimeter restrictions on National when jets arrived in 1966 and landing slot at DCA and four other high density airports in 1969 30 The airport originally had no perimeter rule from 1954 to 1960 piston engine airliners flew nonstop to California 31 32 Scheduled jet airliners were not allowed until April 1966 and concerns about aviation noise led to noise restrictions even before jet service began in 1966 The perimeter rule was implemented in January 1966 as a voluntary agreement by airlines to get permission to use short haul jets at National Dulles was to continue to serve the long haul markets limiting traffic and noise at National the FAA assumed that ground level noise would be reduced because planes would take off light on fuel and be up and away quickly The agreement limited jet flights to 650 statute miles 1 050 km with 7 grandfathered exceptions under 1 000 statute miles 1 600 km The spirit of the agreement was regularly violated as flights left National to an airport within the perimeter and then immediately took off for a destination beyond it Within a year there was a proposal to reduce the perimeter to 500 statute miles 800 km but it was widely opposed and never implemented Overcrowding at National was later managed by the 1969 High Density Rule thereby removing one of the justifications for the perimeter agreement 33 In the 1960s and 1970s several attempts were made to codify the perimeter rule but it was not until Dulles was endangered that it actually become a strict rule In 1970 the FAA lifted the ban at National of the stretched Boeing 727 200 which resulted in a lawsuit by Virginians for Dulles who argued that the airport s jet traffic was a nuisance That suit resulted in a Court of Appeals order to create an Environmental Impact Statement EIS In addition to the court order there were economic problems at Dulles Following the extension of Metrorail to National in 1977 and airline deregulation in 1978 traffic at Dulles began to plummet while it increased at National As part of a slate of efforts to protect Dulles including removing landing fees and mobile lounge user charges the FAA proposed regulations as part of the EIS to limit traffic at National and maintain Dulles s role as the area s airport for long haul destinations In 1980 the FAA proposed codifying the perimeter rule as part of a larger rulemaking effort When the rule was announced airlines challenged it in court the Metropolitan Washington Airports Policy of 1981 codified the perimeter rule on an interim basis to maintain the long haul nonstop service at Dulles and BWI which otherwise would preempt shorter haul service at National At the same time the perimeter was extended to 1 000 statute miles 1 600 km miles to remove the unfairness of having seven grandfathered cities The perimeter rule was upheld by the Court of Appeals in 1982 34 33 In 1986 as part of the Metropolitan Washington Airports Act which handed control of National over to the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority the perimeter was extended to 1 250 statute miles 2 010 km to allow nonstop flights to Houston with Dallas also being permitted to be served nonstop 33 Slots at the airport have been traded in several instances In 2011 US Airways acquired a number of Delta s slots at Reagan National in exchange for Delta receiving a number of US Airways slots at LaGuardia Airport in New York JetBlue paid 40 million to acquire eight slot pairs at auction in the same year 35 JetBlue and Southwest acquired 12 and 27 US Airways slot pairs respectively in 2014 as part of a government mandated divestiture following the merger of US Airways and American 36 Flights normally use Runway 1 19 7169 x 150 2185 m x 46 m as the shorter Runways 15 33 and 4 22 can accommodate them only under very windy conditions Transfer of control and renaming edit In 1984 the Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth Dole appointed a commission to study transferring National and Dulles Airports from the Federal Aviation Administration FAA to a local entity which could use airport revenues to finance improvements 19 The commission recommended that one multi state agency administer both Dulles and National over the alternative of having Virginia control Dulles and the District of Columbia control National 19 In 1987 Congress through legislation 37 transferred control of the airport from the FAA to the new Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority with the Authority s decisions being subject to a Congressional review panel The constitutionality of the review panel was later challenged in the Supreme Court and the Court has twice declared the oversight panel unconstitutional 38 Even after this decision however Congress has continued to intervene in the management of the airports 39 On February 6 1998 President Bill Clinton signed legislation 40 changing the airport s name from Washington National Airport to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport to honor the former president on his 87th birthday 41 The legislation 42 was drafted against the wishes of MWAA officials and political leaders in Northern Virginia and Washington D C 43 44 Opponents of the renaming argued that a large federal office building had already been named for Reagan the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center and that the airport was already named for George Washington the first United States president 44 The bill stated that it did not require the expenditure of any funds to accomplish the name change however state regional and federal authorities were later required to change highway and transit signs at their own additional expense as new signs were made 45 46 21st century edit In 2015 The Express conducted an online survey asking people what they call the airport in Northern Virginia that s not Dulles The results found that only 31 of people referred to the airport as Reagan and only 12 as Reagan National compared to 57 dropping the former president from the name 11 Political preference was shown to have a direct correlation with how people called the airport with 72 of Republicans referring to the airport using Reagan while 64 of Democrats call it National or DCA 12 Given that Washington D C is one of the most Democratic cities in the United States the dominant name does not feature the name Reagan 47 Construction of current terminal buildings edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Terminal 2 in 2014 nbsp The airport with the Crystal City section of Arlington County in the background nbsp Washington D C background and tracks for the Washington Metro left With the addition of more flights and limited space in the aging main terminal the airport began an extensive renovation and expansion in the 1990s Hangar 11 on the northern end of the airport was converted into The USAir Interim Terminal designed by Joseph C Giuliani FAIA Soon after an addition for Delta Air Lines was added in 1989 and was later converted to Authority offices These projects allowed for the relocation of several gates in the main terminal until the new 450 million terminal complex became operational On July 27 1997 the new terminal complex Terminal 2 and two parking garages opened Argentine architect Cesar Pelli designed the new terminals of the airport The Interim Terminal closed immediately after its opening and was converted back into a hangar One pier of the main terminal now widely known as Terminal A which mainly housed American Airlines and Pan Am was demolished the other pier originally designed by Giuliani Associates Architects for Northwest and TWA remains operational today as gates A1 A9 A land bridge is planned which would connect the airport with National Landing directly to Amazon HQ2 48 Operations editPerimeter restrictions edit AirlinesDestinationsAlaska10 slots operating as 2x Seattle Tacoma 1x Los Angeles 1x Portland OR 1x San FranciscoAmerican12 slots operating as 2x Los Angeles 3x Phoenix Sky Harbor 1x Las VegasDelta4 slots operating as 1x Salt Lake City 1x Los AngelesFrontier6 slots operating as 3x DenverJetBlue2 slots operating as 1x San JuanSouthwest2 slots operating as 1x AustinUnited4 slots operating as 1x Denver 1x San FranciscoReagan National Airport is subject to a federally mandated perimeter limitation to keep it a short haul airport and to keep most long haul air traffic to Dulles International Airport 49 The rule was implemented in 1966 and originally limited nonstop service to 650 statute miles 1 050 km with some exceptions for previously existing service 49 Congress extended the limit in the 1980s to 1 000 miles 1 600 km and then again to 1 250 miles 2 010 km 50 Congress and the United States Department of Transportation have created many beyond perimeter exceptions that have weakened the rule 50 Members of Congress repeatedly have sought to extend the limit and permit exceptions in order to allow nonstop service from Reagan National Airport to their home states and districts 51 52 In 1999 Senator John McCain of Arizona introduced legislation to remove the 1 250 statute miles 2 010 km restriction 53 In the end the restriction was not lifted but in 2000 the FAA was permitted to add 24 exemptions which went to Alaska Airlines for flights to Seattle Tacoma International Airport America West later obtained exemptions for non stop flights to Phoenix in 2004 In May 2012 the DOT granted new exemptions for Alaska to serve Portland JetBlue to serve San Juan Southwest to serve Austin and Virgin America to serve San Francisco American Delta United and US Airways were also each allowed to exchange a pair of in perimeter slots for an equal number of beyond perimeter slots 54 In 2023 representatives Chip Roy and Greg Casar both of Austin initiated a new bipartisan proposal to amend the perimeter under an FAA reauthorization bill the current 1 250 mi perimeter passes through central Texas giving the Dallas Fort Worth metroplex and Greater Houston access to Reagan while excluding Austin El Paso and San Antonio although Austin has a single daily nonstop flight under an exemption Delta Texas business interests and Texas senator Ted Cruz back the amendment while American Airlines and others oppose it citing an FAA memo and statistics showing that Reagan has a high rate of delays and that additional flights may exceed its capacity 55 Approach patterns edit nbsp Many pilots regard the Potomac River approach pattern at Reagan National Airport as one of the more interesting landing approaches in the United States 56 Reagan National Airport has some of the strictest noise restrictions in the country 14 In addition due to security concerns the areas surrounding the National Mall and U S Naval Observatory in central Washington are prohibited airspace up to 18 000 feet 5 500 m Due to these restrictions pilots approaching from the north are generally required to follow the path of the Potomac River and turn just before landing This approach is known as the River Visual Similarly flights taking off to the north are required to climb quickly and turn left 57 58 The River Visual airport approach is only possible with a ceiling of at least 3 500 feet 1 100 m and visibility of 3 statute miles 4 8 km or more 59 There are lights on the Key Bridge Theodore Roosevelt Bridge Arlington Memorial Bridge and the George Mason Memorial Bridge to aid pilots following the river Aircraft using the approach can be observed from various parks on the river s west bank Passengers on the left side of an airplane can see the Capitol the Washington Monument the Lincoln Memorial the Jefferson Memorial the World War II Memorial Georgetown University the National Mall portions of Downtown Washington D C including the roof of Capital One Arena and the White House Passengers on the right side can see CIA headquarters Arlington National Cemetery the Pentagon eastern Arlington including portions of Rosslyn Clarendon Ballston Crystal City and the United States Air Force Memorial nbsp Boeing flew a 787 8 Dreamliner into DCA in 2011 It is one of the only wide body aircraft to ever land at the airport When the River Visual is not available due to visibility or winds aircraft may fly an offset localizer or GPS approach to Runway 19 along a similar course flying a direct approach course on instruments as far as Rosslyn and then turning to align with the runway visually moments before touchdown Most airliners are also capable of performing a VOR or GPS approach to the shorter Runway 15 33 Northbound visual and ILS approaches to Runway 1 are also sometimes used these approaches follow the Potomac River from the south and overfly the Woodrow Wilson Bridge 60 Special security measures edit In 1938 Franklin D Roosevelt issued Executive Order No 7910 creating the first restricted airspace around the District of Columbia This would be superseded by a number of executive orders clarifying the boundaries of the airspace until 1966 when it was codified into Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations part 73 Title 14 created Prohibited Airspace 56 A and B P 56A and P 56B P 56A restricted flight around the National Mall White House and United States Capitol Building while P 56B restricted flight in a half mile radius from the center of the U S Naval Observatory Only aircraft supporting the United States Secret Service Office of the President or some government agencies are permitted within the prohibited airspace 61 In the aftermath of the September 11 2001 attacks a Flight Restricted Zone FRZ was put into effect Extending approximately 15 nautical miles or roughly 17 miles around the airport only scheduled commercial flights and governmental flights are allowed into the zone without a waiver from the Federal Aviation Administration Charter flights for the U S government are permitted to land at the airport and Joint Base Andrews under certain conditions 62 After the September 11 attacks the airport was closed for several weeks and security was tightened when it reopened Increased security measures included A ban on aircraft with more than 156 seats lifted in April 2002 63 A ban on the River Visual approach lifted in April 2002 63 A requirement that 30 minutes prior to landing or following takeoff passengers were required to remain seated if anyone stood up the aircraft was to be diverted to Washington Dulles International Airport under military escort and the person standing would be detained and questioned by federal law enforcement officials lifted in July 2005 64 A ban on general aviation lifted in October 2005 subject to the restrictions below 65 On October 18 2005 National Airport was reopened to general aviation on a limited basis 48 operations per day and under restrictions passenger and crew manifests must be submitted to the Transportation Security Administration 24 hours in advance and all planes must pass through one of roughly 70 gateway airports 66 where re inspections of aircraft passengers and baggage take place An armed security officer must be on board before departing a gateway airport 67 On March 23 2011 the air traffic control supervisor on duty reportedly fell asleep during the night shift Two aircraft on approach to the airport were unable to contact anyone in the control tower and landed unassisted 68 Terminals and facilities edit nbsp National Hall in Terminal 2DCA has 59 gates with jetways 9 gates in Terminal 1 and 50 gates in Terminal 2 13 gates in Concourse B 12 in Concourse C 11 in Concourse D and 14 in the new Concourse E 69 The two terminals are not connected to each other post security A new terminal and gate numbering scheme was implemented in 2022 Previously Terminal 1 was Terminal A and Terminal 2 was Terminal B C as it is one building All gates also now have a letter A through E for each of the five concourses Therefore Gate 33 became Gate C33 Other changes include B Parking and C Parking becoming Parking 2 South and Parking 2 North 70 Terminal 1 edit nbsp Gate area of Terminal 1Designed by architect Charles M Goodman terminal 1 opened in 1941 and was expanded in 1955 to accommodate more passengers and airlines The exterior of this terminal has had its original architecture restored with the airside facade restored in 2004 and the landside facade restored in 2008 71 The terminal underwent a 37 million renovation that modernized the airport s look by bringing in brighter lighting more windows and new flooring The project was completed in 2014 along with a new expanded TSA security checkpoint 72 In 2014 additional renovations were announced including new upgraded concessions and further structural improvements the project was completed in 2015 73 Terminal 1 contains gates A1 A9 and houses operations from Air Canada Express Frontier and Southwest with Southwest having the largest presence in Terminal 1 Terminal 2 edit nbsp Inside the departure areaTerminal 2 is the airport s newest and largest terminal the terminal opened in 1997 and replaced a collection of airline specific terminals built during the 1960s The new terminal Concourses B D was designed by architect Cesar Pelli and houses 35 gates The terminal is directly connected to the WMATA airport station via indoor pedestrian bridges Concourse E which expanded Terminal 2 opened in 2021 as a replacement for Gate 35X which was a bus gate 74 75 Terminals 2 has four concourses Concourse B Gates B10 B22 houses Alaska Airlines Delta and United Concourse C Gates C23 C34 houses American and JetBlue Concourse D Gates D35 D45 is exclusive to American for their hub at DCA along with Concourse E Gates E46 E59 that houses American Eagle and American 76 The corridor hall connecting the four concourses of Terminal 2 is known as National Hall Concourse B houses a Delta Sky Club and United Club and there are three American Admirals Clubs in Terminal 2 77 The Delta Sky Club was renovated in summer 2018 78 Lounges edit There are currently six airport lounges at the airport in all the Terminals There are three American Airlines Admirals Clubs one near gate C24 in concourse C one in concourse D near gate D36 and one in Concourse E near gate E47 In concourse B there is a Delta Sky Club near gate B15 and a United Club near gate B10 79 In Terminal 1 there is a USO lounge for retired and active military members pre security Originally scheduled for 2022 an American Express Centurion Lounge is scheduled to open in terminal 2 in 2023 80 by door 1 on the ticketing level 81 A Capital One lounge is also scheduled to open in 2023 82 Project Journey edit MWAA began construction of a new concourse north of Terminal 2 in February 2018 to accommodate 14 new regional jet gates with jetways bringing the total number of gates at DCA to 60 This replaced Gate 35X a bus gate formerly used to bring passengers to and from American Eagle flights that used parking spots on the ramp Officially called Project Journey construction was completed on April 20 2021 74 75 In addition the individual security checkpoints for the four concourses in Terminal 2 were replaced with higher capacity security checkpoints in two new buildings to the west of National Hall located next to the two Metro station pedestrian bridges and in between the two existing arrivals and departures roadways placing all of National Hall within the secured area of the airport and allowing passengers to walk between concourses without re clearing security 74 The new checkpoints were opened on November 9 2021 83 Ground transportation edit nbsp Reagan National station of the Washington Metro connects the airport to the surrounding region via rail The Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport station on the Washington Metro served by the Yellow and Blue lines is located on an elevated outdoor platform station adjacent to Terminal 2 Two elevated pedestrian walkways connect the station directly to the concourse levels of Terminal 2 An underground pedestrian walkway and shuttle services provide access to Terminal 1 84 Metrobus provides service on weekend mornings before the Metro station opens or during any disruptions to regular Metro service citation needed Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport is located on the George Washington Memorial Parkway and connected to U S Route 1 by the Airport Viaduct State Route 233 Interstate 395 is just north of the airport and is also accessible by the G W Parkway and U S Route 1 85 Airport operated parking garage facilities as well as economy lots are available adjacent to or near the various airport terminals The airport is accessible by bicycle and foot from the Mount Vernon Trail as well as the sidewalk along the Airport Viaduct State Route 233 which connects the airport grounds to U S Route 1 A total of 48 bike parking spots are available across six separate bike racks The airport has a Capital Bikeshare station 86 making this the first major airport in the United States to have a dock based bikeshare station 87 Airlines and destinations editAirlinesDestinationsRefsAir Canada ExpressMontreal Trudeau Ottawa Toronto Pearson 88 Alaska AirlinesLos Angeles Portland OR San Francisco Seattle Tacoma 89 American AirlinesAtlanta Boston Charlotte Chicago O Hare Dallas Fort Worth Fort Lauderdale 90 Fort Myers Indianapolis Las Vegas Los Angeles Miami New Orleans New York LaGuardia Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Sky Harbor Raleigh Durham TampaSeasonal Bangor Bermuda resumes April 4 2024 91 Burlington VT Charleston SC Columbus Glenn Destin Fort Walton Beach Hartford Jacksonville FL Kansas City Myrtle Beach Nashville Nassau Panama City FL Pensacola Pittsburgh Portland ME Sarasota Savannah St Louis Syracuse West Palm Beach 92 American EagleAkron Canton Albany NY Asheville Augusta GA Bangor Baton Rouge Birmingham AL Buffalo Burlington VT Cedar Rapids Iowa City Charleston SC Charleston WV Chattanooga Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia SC Columbus Glenn Dayton Des Moines Detroit Fayetteville Bentonville Grand Rapids Greensboro Greenville Spartanburg Hartford Huntsville Jackson MS Jacksonville FL Kansas City Key West Knoxville Lansing Little Rock Louisville Madison Manchester NH Memphis Milwaukee 93 Minneapolis St Paul Montgomery Myrtle Beach Nashville New York JFK Norfolk Oklahoma City Panama City FL Pensacola Pittsburgh Portland ME Providence Raleigh Durham Rochester NY Sarasota Savannah St Louis Syracuse Tallahassee Toronto Pearson Tulsa West Palm Beach White Plains Wichita 94 Wilmington NC Seasonal Daytona Beach Destin Fort Walton Beach Halifax Hilton Head Hyannis begins June 22 2024 95 Martha s Vineyard Melbourne Orlando Nantucket Nassau New Bern Traverse City 92 Delta Air LinesAtlanta Detroit Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis St Paul New York JFK New York LaGuardia Orlando Salt Lake City 96 Delta ConnectionBoston Cincinnati Lexington Madison Nashville New York JFK New York LaGuardia Omaha Raleigh Durham 96 Frontier AirlinesDenver 97 JetBlueBoston Fort Lauderdale Fort Myers Nassau Orlando San Juan West Palm BeachSeasonal Martha s Vineyard Nantucket 98 Southwest AirlinesAtlanta Austin Chicago Midway Columbus Glenn Dallas Love Fort Lauderdale Houston Hobby Kansas City Milwaukee Nashville New Orleans Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Providence St Louis Tampa Seasonal Albany 99 Fort Myers Memphis 99 Sarasota 100 United AirlinesChicago O Hare Denver Houston Intercontinental San Francisco 101 United ExpressChicago O Hare Houston Intercontinental Newark 101 Statistics editTop destinations edit Busiest domestic routes from DCA November 2022 October 2023 102 Rank Airport Passengers Carriers1 nbsp Atlanta Georgia 780 000 American Delta Southwest2 nbsp Boston Massachusetts 778 000 American Delta JetBlue3 nbsp Chicago O Hare Illinois 693 000 American United4 nbsp Orlando Florida 538 000 American JetBlue Southwest5 nbsp Miami Florida 455 000 American6 nbsp Dallas Fort Worth Texas 440 000 American7 nbsp New York LaGuardia New York 377 000 American Delta8 nbsp Charlotte North Carolina 335 000 American9 nbsp Fort Lauderdale Florida 308 000 American JetBlue Southwest10 nbsp Minneapolis St Paul Minnesota 264 000 American DeltaAirline market share edit Largest airlines at DCA November 2022 October 2023 103 Rank Airline Passengers Market share1 American Airlines 6 929 000 28 76 2 Southwest Airlines 3 496 000 14 51 3 Delta Air Lines 2 154 000 8 94 4 JetBlue Airways 1 825 000 7 57 5 United Airlines 1 246 000 5 17 Other 8 447 000 35 05 Annual traffic edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Annual passenger traffic at DCA airport See Wikidata query Annual passenger traffic at DCA 1991 present 104 Year Passengers Year Passengers Year Passengers Year Passengers2000 15 888 199 2010 18 118 713 2020 7 574 966 20301999 15 185 348 2009 17 577 359 2019 23 945 527 20291998 15 970 306 2008 18 028 287 2018 23 464 618 20281997 15 907 006 2007 18 679 343 2017 23 903 248 20271996 15 226 500 2006 18 550 785 2016 23 595 006 20261995 15 506 244 2005 17 847 884 2015 23 039 429 20251994 15 700 825 2004 15 944 542 2014 20 810 387 20241993 16 307 808 2003 14 223 123 2013 20 415 085 20231992 15 593 535 2002 12 881 601 2012 19 655 440 2022 23 961 4421991 15 098 697 2001 13 265 387 2011 18 823 094 2021 14 044 724Abingdon plantation historical site editA part of the airport is located on the former site of the 18th and 19th century Abingdon plantation which was associated with the prominent Alexander Custis Stuart and Hunter families 105 In 1998 MWAA opened a historical display around the restored remnants of two Abingdon buildings and placed artifacts collected from the site in an exhibit hall in Terminal A 106 107 The Abingdon site is located on a knoll between parking Garage A and Garage B C near the south end of the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Metrorail station 106 108 109 110 Accidents and incidents editPage Airways edit On April 27 1945 a Page Airways Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar on a charter flight 111 crashed into a deep ditch at the end of runway 33 after aborting a takeoff due to engine failure There were strong gusts and ground turbulence at the time Out of the 13 passengers and crew on board six passengers were killed 112 Although a contemporary newspaper report indicated that the flight s intended destination had been Rochester New York 111 the Civil Aeronautics Board s accident investigation report stated that the destination had been New York N Y 112 Eastern Air Lines Flight 537 edit Main article Eastern Air Lines Flight 537 On November 1 1949 a mid air collision between an Eastern Air Lines passenger aircraft and a P 38 Lightning military plane took the lives of 55 passengers The sole survivor was the Bolivian pilot of the fighter plane Erick Rios Bridoux 113 Bridoux s plane had taken off from National just 10 minutes earlier and was in contact with the tower during a brief test flight The Eastern Air Lines DC 4 was on approach from the south when the nimble and much faster P 38 banked and plunged right into the passenger plane Both aircraft dropped into the Potomac River Capital Airlines Flight 500 edit On December 12 1949 Capital Airlines Flight 500 a Douglas DC 3 stalled and crashed into the Potomac River while on approach to Washington National Six of the 23 passengers and crew on board were killed 114 Air Florida Flight 90 edit Main article Air Florida Flight 90 nbsp The tail of Air Florida Flight 90 being raised from the Potomac River following its January 13 1982 crashOn the afternoon of January 13 1982 115 following a period of exceptionally cold weather and a morning of blizzard conditions Air Florida Flight 90 crashed after waiting 49 minutes on a taxiway and taking off with ice and snow on the wings The Boeing 737 aircraft failed to gain altitude Less than 1 statute mile 1 6 km from the end of the runway the airplane struck the 14th Street Bridge complex shearing the tops off vehicles stuck in traffic before plunging through the 1 inch thick 25 mm ice covering the Potomac River Rescue responses were greatly hampered by the weather and traffic Due to action on the part of motorists a United States Park Service police helicopter crew and one of the plane s passengers who later died five occupants of the downed plane survived The other 74 people who were aboard and four occupants of vehicles on the bridge were killed President Ronald Reagan praised motorist Lenny Skutnik in his State of the Union Address a few weeks later References edit a b c d e f History Flyreagan com Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority 2011 Archived from the original on January 5 2011 Retrieved March 24 2011 a b FAA Airport Form 5010 for DCA PDF Reagan Air Traffic Statistics Mwaa com Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority January 2022 Archived from the original on March 27 2019 Retrieved February 15 2023 a b National Register Information System 97001111 National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 FAA Airport Form 5010 for DCA PDF effective July 13 2023 DCA airport data at skyvector com skyvector com Retrieved September 3 2022 Virginia Landmarks Register Virginia Department of Historic Resources Archived from the original on September 21 2013 Retrieved May 12 2013 Airport Data and Information Portal adip faa gov Retrieved January 2 2020 Kellman Laurie February 5 1998 Clinton to sign bill renaming National Airport for Reagan The Day New London Connecticut Associated Press p A3 Archived from the original on May 21 2016 Retrieved June 24 2015 What s in an eponym Celebrity airports could there be a commercial benefit in naming Centre for Aviation Archived from the original on August 20 2016 Retrieved April 12 2015 a b Dingfelder Sadie Morris Holly J April 1 2015 National Reagan DCA 17 years later locals still can t agree on the name of the airport in question The Washington Post Express Retrieved October 26 2021 a b Bender Andrew April 2 2015 Washington s Never Ending Controversy What To Call Its Airport Forbes Retrieved October 20 2016 Anatomy Landing a Plane at Reagan National Airport Washingtonian DC Washingtonian December 6 2012 a b Aircraft Noise Procedures and Guidelines at Reagan National Airport Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority Archived from the original on August 7 2011 Retrieved February 21 2010 Aratani Lori February 18 2023 Reagan National sets passenger record in 2022 as leisure travel jumps The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved July 20 2023 mwaa com Reagan National s Runway is Busiest in America www mwaa com Retrieved July 20 2023 Arlington s Flying Field is Dedicated The Washington Post July 17 1926 p 20 ProQuest 149713699 McCarran Sees Death Peril in Local Airport Says Major Disaster Has Been Prevented Here Only by Luck The Washington Post May 13 1938 a b c Feaver Douglas B July 16 1997 Years of Deal Making Enabled Change From Disgrace to Showplace Washington Post Archived from the original on May 31 2010 Retrieved December 20 2009 See Abingdon plantation for history Nicholas William H amp Edwards Walter Meayers September 1943 Wartime Washington National Geographic Threaded Extremes May 19 2006 Archived from the original on May 19 2006 Aviation Daily February 26 1971 p314 DCA74intro Departed Flights Archived from the original on October 6 2017 Retrieved October 5 2017 McGuire R C January 1 1969 Report on grooved runway experience at Washington National Airport Internet Archive Federal Aviation Administration Retrieved February 5 2017 History of Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority 2011 Archived from the original on June 23 2011 Retrieved March 24 2011 Carol Hooper Elizabeth Lampl amp Judith Robinson April 1994 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Washington National Airport Terminal and South Hangar Line PDF Archived PDF from the original on September 26 2012 Retrieved May 30 2013 and Accompanying photo Archived October 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine https www ncei noaa gov news airport runway names shift magnetic field November 20 2017 retrieved on July 6 2018 Runway Projects Archived July 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Metwashairports com Retrieved on August 16 2013 Code of Federal Regulations Volume 2 Part 93 Subpart K PDF U S Government Printing Office October 24 1970 Archived PDF from the original on July 28 2014 Retrieved July 25 2014 American Airlines timetable 1958 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved November 25 2012 TWA timetable 1959 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved November 25 2012 a b c Knickerbocker Dr Nancy Norgaard The History of National Airport Citizens for the Abatement of Aircraft Noise Archived from the original on July 6 2016 Retrieved July 13 2017 Metropolitan Washington Airports PDF Federal Register 46 228 58036 58037 November 27 1981 Archived PDF from the original on August 31 2017 Retrieved July 13 2017 US Airways Washington Airport Prize Hobbles AMR Merger Bloomberg August 29 2013 Archived from the original on October 13 2018 Retrieved October 12 2018 JetBlue Southwest gain slots at Reagan Airport USA Today January 30 2014 Archived from the original on October 12 2018 Retrieved October 12 2018 Metropolitan Washington Airports Act of 1986 Public Law No 99 500 Section 6001 METROPOLITAN WASHINGTON AIRPORTS AUTHORITY v CITIZENS FOR THE ABATEMENT OF AIRCRAFT NOISE INC 501 U S 252 1991 This can be seen by Congress s continued use of legislation to limit the number of flights at National Airport as well as expanding the perimeter and number of exemptions for flights outside that limit Public Law No 105 154 To rename the Washington National Airport located in the District of Columbia and Virginia as the Ronald Reagan National Airport January 27 1998 Archived from the original on July 20 2012 It s Reagan Airport now McCook Daily Gazette Associated Press February 7 1998 Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved November 26 2015 Bill renames Washington National Airport after Reagan Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Associated Press January 28 1988 p A3 Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved June 24 2015 Alvarez Lizette February 4 1998 G O P Tries to Wrap Up an Airport for Reagan The New York Times a b Congress Votes for Reagan Airport Washington Post February 5 1998 p A01 Archived from the original on May 31 2010 Retrieved December 20 2009 Hansen in road sign rage over lack of Reagan airport markers Deseret News June 7 1998 Zachary M Schrag 2006 The Great Society Subway A History of the Washington Metro JHU Press p 258 ISBN 9780801889066 Desilver Drew August 8 2014 Chart of the Week The most liberal and conservative big cities Pew Research Center Retrieved October 26 2021 Warfield Marcel Nuyen Suzanne November 13 2018 What is the new National Landing neighborhood for Amazon s HQ2 Retrieved November 14 2018 Commonwealth investing 195 million in infrastructure in the neighborhood including improvements to the Crystal City and the Potomac Yard Metro stations a pedestrian bridge connecting National Landing and Reagan National Airport a b DCA Reagan National Slot amp Perimeter Rules Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority July 17 2015 a b Mutzabaugh Ben Proposal to extend DCA s perimeter rule withdrawn USA Today Post ALAN SIPRESS The Washington March 5 1999 3 SENATORS GAIN FROM AIRPORT BILL Sun Sentinel com Halsey Ashley III House member withdraws plan to expand flights at National airport The Washington Post Sipress Alan November 11 1999 More Flights Unlikely Now At National The Washington Post p B1 ProQuest 408563593 DOT Selects Four Cities to Receive New Nonstop Service to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Department of Transportation Archived February 24 2014 at the Wayback Machine Dot gov May 14 2012 Retrieved on August 16 2013 Morton Joseph June 26 2023 Texans could see more direct flights or more delays from Reagan National Airport fight The Dallas Morning News Retrieved June 26 2023 Why you should NEVER fly into Washington National Airport JetHead s Blog December 24 2011 Archived from the original on April 26 2012 Retrieved May 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from the original on May 22 2007 Retrieved March 26 2007 TSA Suspends 30 Minute Rule for Reagan National Airport Transportation Security Administration July 14 2005 Archived from the original on September 23 2015 Retrieved March 26 2007 TSA Opens Ronald Reagan Washington Airport to General Aviation Operations Transportation Security Administration October 18 2005 Archived from the original on May 22 2007 Retrieved March 26 2007 DASSP Gateway Locations PDF June 2 2020 Retrieved July 20 2020 Restoration of General Aviation at Washington Reagan National Airport Transportation Security Administration Archived from the original on August 5 2012 Retrieved March 24 2011 Uncontrolled airport situation at Washington National eTurboNews March 25 2011 Archived from the original on March 17 2012 Retrieved March 25 2011 Terminal Map Retrieved May 18 2021 National Airport Is Renaming Gates And Terminals Here s What Travelers Need To Know Archived from the original on June 9 2022 Retrieved June 12 2022 History of Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority Archived from the original on May 14 2013 Retrieved August 29 2013 Aratani Lori August 27 2013 Reagan National s Terminal A is Getting 37M Facelift The Washington Post Archived from the original on August 28 2013 Retrieved August 29 2013 MWAA Terminal A Renovation Terminal a Renovation Archived from the original on July 2 2014 Retrieved July 31 2014 a b c Lazo Luz February 17 2018 Reagan National s rehab project will create some pain for drivers and travelers Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on March 6 2018 Retrieved March 5 2018 a b Reagan National Airport Opens New 14 Gate Concourse DCA Terminal Map PDF flyreagan com Archived PDF from the original on February 28 2018 Retrieved February 27 2018 Airline Lounges Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority July 20 2015 Archived from the original on February 28 2018 Retrieved February 27 2018 Mutzabaugh Ben June 27 2018 Delta unveils overhauled Sky Club at D C s Reagan National Airport USA TODAY Archived from the original on November 28 2022 Retrieved March 16 2023 Airline Lounges Reagan National Airport Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority Archived from the original on March 16 2023 Retrieved March 16 2023 Helfand Carly January 20 2023 Why 2023 Will Be the Year of the Airport Lounge Conde Nast Traveler Archived from the original on March 9 2023 Retrieved March 16 2023 Kheel Julian February 17 2021 Washington s Reagan National Airport to get new Amex Centurion Lounge CNN Underscored Archived from the original on March 13 2023 Retrieved March 16 2023 Clabaugh Jeff October 19 2022 Reagan National will get a Capital One lounge with Jose Andres on the menu WTOP News Archived from the original on December 4 2022 Retrieved March 16 2023 Pascale Jordan October 13 2021 DCA Opens Its New TSA Security Halls On Nov 9 Here s How Your Airport Experience Will Change DCist Archived from the original on October 4 2022 Retrieved March 16 2023 Metrorail Station Reagan National Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority Archived from the original on January 11 2023 Retrieved March 16 2023 Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority 2011 Directions to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Reagan National Airport Archived from the original on October 25 2011 Retrieved October 21 2011 BikeArlington December 2 2020 The Capital Bikeshare station at National Airport is live Traveling to the airport just got a whole lot easier Tweet via Twitter Clabaugh Jeff December 3 2020 A US airport first Shared bicycles at Reagan National WTOP News Archived from the original on September 28 2021 Retrieved March 16 2023 Flight Schedules Archived from the original on September 25 2019 Retrieved January 7 2017 Flight Timetable Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved January 29 2017 American Airlines To Launch Two New Routes From Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Simple Flying June 19 2023 Retrieved June 21 2023 AA to restart direct flights to Washington October 13 2023 a b Flight schedules and notifications Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved January 7 2017 American Airlines non stop flights from Milwaukee to Washington DC starting Oct 5 2023 June 19 2023 Wichita gets non stop flights to Washington D C KSN TV July 14 2023 Retrieved July 15 2023 American Airlines adds more ways to escape to the Cape and coves of New England in 2024 American Airlines Newsroom October 12 2023 Retrieved October 12 2023 a b FLIGHT SCHEDULES Archived from the original on June 21 2015 Retrieved January 7 2017 Frontier Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved January 7 2017 JetBlue Airlines Timetable Archived from the original on July 13 2013 Retrieved January 29 2017 a b Southwest Airlines Expands Service to Nation s Capital with New Nonstop Routes Southwest Media May 18 2023 Retrieved May 18 2023 Check Flight Schedules Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved June 16 2022 a b Timetable Archived from the original on January 28 2017 Retrieved January 7 2017 Washington DC Ronald Reagan Washington National DCA Bureau of Transportation Statistics Retrieved February 6 2024 Washington DC Ronald Reagan Washington National DCA www transtats bts gov Bureau of Transportation Statistics Retrieved February 6 2024 Reagan Air Traffic Statistics Archived from the original on March 27 2019 Retrieved February 15 2023 Templeman Eleanor Lee 1959 Arlington Heritage Vignettes of a Virginia County New York Avenel Books a division of Crown Publishers Inc pp 12 13 ISBN 978 0 517 16709 0 Archived from the original on April 28 2016 Retrieved November 26 2015 a b Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority November 12 1998 Historic Site At Airport Open to Travelers And Public Archived from the original on November 20 2008 Retrieved March 4 2008 Sipress Alan November 11 1998 At National Airport A Historic Destination The Washington Post Washington D C pp B1 B7 Archived from the original on March 15 2013 Retrieved July 7 2017 Parking Map DCA Terminal Map Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority June 2011 Archived from the original on March 22 2015 Retrieved June 16 2011 Cressey Pamela J 2002 Walk and Bike the Alexandria Heritage Trail A Guide to Exploring a Virginia Town s Hidden Past Capital Books pp 16 17 ISBN 1 892123 89 4 Archived from the original on January 4 2014 Retrieved June 16 2011 Coordinates of Abingdon Plantation historical site 38 51 4 8 N 77 2 40 2 W 38 851333 N 77 044500 W 38 851333 77 044500 Abingdon Plantation historical site a b Two Persons Die in Plane Crash St Petersburg Times AP April 28 1945 p 3 Retrieved June 4 2023 a b Accident description for NC33328 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on April 11 2019 ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 54 Archived from the original on October 21 2012 Retrieved October 19 2015 Accident description for NC25691 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on February 20 2022 We re Going Down Larry Time Vol 119 no 7 February 15 1982 p 21 Archived from the original on January 22 2011 Retrieved March 24 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Official website nbsp nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency Airport Map Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority June 2011 Historic American Engineering Record documentation HAER No VA 51 A Washington National Airport Hangar No 1 30 photos 9 data pages 2 photo caption pages HAER No VA 51 B Washington National Airport Air Transport Command Passenger Terminal Operations Building 25 photos 23 data pages 3 photo caption pages HAER No VA 51 C Washington National Airport Air Transport Command Portable Hangar 11 photos 9 data pages 3 photo caption pages HAER No VA 51 D Washington National Airport Hangar Nos 8 9 11 and 12 23 photos 13 data pages 5 photo caption pages HAER No VA 82 North Airport Entry Underpass George Washington Memorial Parkway at National Airport 2 data pages HAER No VA 84 South Airport Exit Overpass George Washington Memorial Parkway at National Airport 2 data pages HAER No VA 85 Route 1 National Airport Overpass George Washington Memorial Parkway at Route 1 National Airport 2 data pages HAER No VA 92 Original Airport Entrance Overpass Spanning original Airport Entrance Road at National Airport 6 photos 3 data pages 1 photo caption page KDCA Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport at airnav com FAA Airport Diagram PDF effective January 25 2024 FAA Terminal Procedures for DCA effective January 25 2024 Resources for this airport AirNav airport information for KDCA ASN accident history for DCA FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker NOAA NWS weather observations current past three days SkyVector aeronautical chart for KDCA FAA current DCA delay information Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ronald Reagan 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