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William P. Hobby Airport

William P. Hobby Airport (IATA: HOU, ICAO: KHOU, FAA LID: HOU) (colloquially referred to as Hobby Airport, Houston Hobby, or simply Hobby) is an international airport in Houston, Texas, located 7 miles (11 km) from downtown Houston.[3] Hobby is Houston's oldest commercial airport, and was its primary airport until the Houston Intercontinental Airport, now known as the George Bush Intercontinental Airport, opened in 1969. Hobby was initially closed after the opening of Houston Intercontinental; however, it was re-opened after several years, and became a secondary airport for domestic airline service, and a center for corporate and private aviation.

William P. Hobby Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerCity of Houston
OperatorHouston Airport System
ServesGreater Houston
LocationHouston, Texas, United States
Opened1927; 96 years ago (1927)
Focus city forSouthwest Airlines
Elevation AMSL46 ft / 14 m
Coordinates29°38′44″N 95°16′44″W / 29.64556°N 95.27889°W / 29.64556; -95.27889Coordinates: 29°38′44″N 95°16′44″W / 29.64556°N 95.27889°W / 29.64556; -95.27889
Websitefly2houston.com/hou
Maps

FAA diagram as of 2014
HOU
HOU
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
04/22 7,602 2,317 Concrete
13L/31R 5,148 1,569 Concrete
13R/31L 7,599 2,316 Asphalt
Statistics (2022)
Aircraft operations189,979
Total Passengers13,113,866

Houston Hobby is an operating base for Southwest Airlines, which has international and domestic flights from HOU, and carries the vast majority of its passengers. As of December 2017, Houston Hobby is the fifth largest airport in Southwest's network.[4] Southwest opened its first international terminal at Houston Hobby, and began service from Houston Hobby to Mexico and Central and South America on October 15, 2015.[5]

The William P. Hobby Airport covers 1,304 acres (528 ha), and has three runways.[1][6] Its original art deco terminal building, the first passenger airline terminal in Houston, now houses the 1940 Air Terminal Museum.

Hobby became the first 5-Star Airport in North America by Skytrax in 2022.[7]

History

 
The 1940 Air Terminal Museum, originally an air terminal opened in 1940

Hobby Airport opened in 1927 as a private landing field in a 600-acre (240 ha) pasture known as W.T. Carter Field. In the 1930s, it was served by Braniff International Airways and Eastern Air Lines. The site was acquired by the city of Houston and was named Houston Municipal Airport in 1937.[8] The airport was renamed Howard R. Hughes Airport in 1938. Howard Hughes was responsible for several improvements to the airport, including its first control tower, built in 1938.[8] The airport's name changed back to Houston Municipal because Hughes was still alive at the time and regulations did not allow federal improvement funds for an airport named after a living person.

The city of Houston opened a new air terminal and hangar in 1940.

Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) in 1943

The first three Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) training classes were held at the Houston Municipal Airport in 1943.

Airlines in the 1940s and 1950s

In June 1948, Braniff International Airways began international flights from Houston operated with Douglas DC-4 and DC-6s to South America via Cuba and Panama.[9] In the June 1948 timetable, the airline had two flights a week to Havana, CubaPanama City, Panama (via Balboa, Canal Zone) – Guayaquil, EcuadorLima, Peru and a third flight that skipped Guayaquil. In 1949, Braniff flew direct via Lima to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and La Paz, Bolivia.[10] In 1950, Pan American World Airways (Pan Am) began nonstop Douglas DC-4 service to Mexico City. On October 1, 1950, Chicago and Southern Air Lines began flying new Lockheed Constellations nonstop to St. Louis and direct to Chicago Midway Airport.[11] Chicago & Southern flew nonstop to New Orleans, the sole purpose being to connect to the airline's daily Douglas DC-4 "Caribbean Comet" flights between New Orleans and Havana, Cuba; Kingston, Jamaica and Caracas, Venezuela as Chicago & Southern did not then have local traffic rights between Houston and New Orleans.[11] In 1953, Chicago & Southern (C&S) was acquired by and merged into Delta Air Lines, giving Delta access to Houston for the first time.[12] In 1954, Delta, operating as "Delta C&S", was flying a daily Convair 340 Houston – New Orleans – Havana, CubaPort au Prince, HaitiCiudad Trujillo (now Santo Domingo), Dominican RepublicSan Juan, Puerto Rico.[13] Also in 1954, an expanded terminal building opened to support the 53,640 airline flights that carried 910,047 passengers.[14] The airport was renamed Houston International Airport the same year.

The April 1957 Official Airline Guide lists 26 weekday departures on Eastern, 20 on Braniff (plus four departures a week to/from South America), nine on Continental Airlines, nine on Delta Air Lines, nine on Trans-Texas Airways, four on National Airlines, two on Pan American World Airways and one on American Airlines. There were nonstops to New York City and Washington D.C., but not to Chicago or Denver or anywhere west of Colorado. Later in 1957, KLM Royal Dutch Airlines started Douglas DC-7C flights to Amsterdam via Montreal. In 1958, Delta was operating daily nonstop Douglas DC-7s to New York City and weekly DC-7s direct to Caracas, Venezuela via New Orleans (Delta called this latter service the "El Petrolero")[15] while Eastern Douglas DC-7s and Lockheed Constellations flew nonstop to New York City.[16]

The jet age arrives

Houston's first scheduled jets were Delta Douglas DC-8s nonstop to New York in December 1959 (Cearley says they began on December 1). Braniff International introduced Boeing 707s in April 1960, nonstop to Dallas Love Field and direct to Chicago O'Hare Airport; Braniff Lockheed L-188 Electra propjets flew nonstop to Chicago Midway Airport and Dallas Love Field, and direct to Denver, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Kansas City and Lubbock.[17] In June 1960, Eastern Airlines Douglas DC-8s flew nonstop to New York City Idlewild Airport and to Atlanta, in addition to Lockheed L-188 Electras nonstop to Washington D.C. National Airport with one-stop Electras to Newark.[18] In July 1960, KLM introduced Douglas DC-8 flights to Amsterdam via Montreal before moving to Houston Intercontinental Airport (now George Bush Intercontinental Airport), where they remain today with nonstop Boeing 787 flights to Amsterdam.[19] On May 15, 1960, Delta Air Lines operated the world's first Convair 880 scheduled passenger flight nonstop to New York City Idlewild Airport from Hobby.[20] Delta would introduce Convair 880 flights nonstop to Chicago O'Hare Airport, St. Louis and New Orleans from Houston in addition to its service to New York City.[21]

In June 1961, National Airlines Douglas DC-8s and Continental 707s began flying nonstop to Los Angeles, and National Electras flew nonstop to Las Vegas, San Diego and San Francisco. These were Houston's first nonstops beyond El Paso.[22] In 1963, Continental Vickers Viscounts flew Houston-Austin-San Angelo-Midland/Odessa-El Paso-Tucson-Phoenix-Los Angeles, and Viscounts flew direct to Lubbock and Amarillo.[23] In summer 1965, American Airlines only had one jet flight a day from Hobby, a Boeing 707 flying Houston-San Antonio-El Paso-Phoenix-Oakland-San Francisco.[24] Eastern Boeing 727-100s flew nonstop to Washington D.C. Dulles Airport, New Orleans and Corpus Christi and direct to New York Newark Airport and Boston.[25] Eastern Boeing 720s flew nonstop to New York JFK Airport, Atlanta, New Orleans and San Antonio and direct to Boston and Philadelphia.[26] By 1966, Houston-based Trans-Texas Airways (TTa) had introduced Douglas DC-9-10s with nonstop flights to Dallas Love Field, Corpus Christi and Baton Rouge and direct to New Orleans.[27] In 1966, Braniff was operating flights via interchange agreements with both Pan American World Airways (Pan Am) and United Airlines from Hobby. The service with Pan Am flew to London, England and Frankfurt, Germany daily with Boeing 707s via at Dallas Love Field and Chicago O'Hare Airport.[28] The joint operation with United was flown with Boeing 720s twice daily Houston-Dallas-Denver-Seattle and Houston-Dallas-Denver-Portland, OR-Seattle.[29] The same year, Braniff BAC One-Elevens flew nonstop to Dallas Love Field, Fort Worth (via Greater Southwest International Airport), Tulsa and Corpus Christi and direct to Chicago O'Hare Airport, Minneapolis/St. Paul, St. Louis and Wichita.[28]

In 1967, the airport was renamed after a former Texas governor, William P. Hobby.

Besides the Braniff/Pan Am and KLM services to Europe, the airport had other long flights: Braniff was flying nonstop from Hobby to Panama City, Panama with Boeing 707s and Boeing 720s in the late 1960s.[30] Braniff's April 1969 timetable lists nonstop 707 service to Hawaii;[31] however, Braniff flights from Houston to Hawaii didn't actually start until September 1, after the move to IAH.[32] (Hobby's 7600-ft runways would have been too short for 707 nonstop service to Hawaii.)[citation needed]

Houston Intercontinental Airport (IAH), now George Bush Intercontinental Airport, opened in June 1969; the airlines moved to Intercontinental and Hobby was left with no scheduled passenger service. The Civil Aeronautics Administration recommended years earlier that Houston plan to replace Hobby.[33]

 
The Hobby Airport terminal

International service in the 1960s

Previously, KLM and Pan American World Airways (Pan Am) operated international flights from the International Building at Hobby until the late 1960s.[34] In 1966, Pan Am was operating a daily Boeing 707 flight nonstop to Mexico City with continuing, no change of plane service to Guatemala City, Guatemala; San Salvador, El Salvador; Managua, Nicaragua; San José, Costa Rica and Panama City, Panama.[35] In 1969, both airlines moved to IAH and the International Building was demolished.[36] Braniff International operated international service as well from the airport and in the spring of 1966 was operating nonstop Boeing 707 and Boeing 720 jet service twice a week to Panama City, Panama with connections in Panama to other Braniff flights to South America.[37] Also in 1966, Braniff was operating a joint international service via an interchange agreement with Pan Am to London, England and Frankfurt, Germany on a daily basis with Boeing 707 jetliners via intermediate stops at Dallas Love Field and Chicago O'Hare Airport.[28] Aeronaves de Mexico (now Aeromexico) served Hobby as well with flights to Mexico and in the spring of 1968 was operating Douglas DC-9-10 jet service nonstop to Monterrey with continuing, no change of plane service several days a week to Guadalajara and Acapulco.[38] Trans-Texas Airways also served Mexico and in 1968 was operating direct, no change of plane service from Hobby with Convair 600 turboprops eleven times a week to Monterrey and six times a week to Tampico and Veracruz via south Texas.[39]

Resumption of airline service

The first airline to resume passenger flights was Houston Metro Airlines, a commuter airline, which in early 1970 was flying "cross town" service with de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otters between Hobby and Houston Intercontinental Airport (IAH) with 14 weekday round trips.[40]

Jet airline service resumed on November 14, 1971, when Southwest Airlines operating as an intrastate airline began nonstop Boeing 737-200s to Dallas Love Field (DAL) and San Antonio (Southwest had initially launched service between Intercontinental Airport and Dallas Love Field before serving Hobby).[41] Both Braniff International and Texas International resumed jet service into Hobby with nonstops to Dallas in competition with Southwest.[42]

By fall 1979, Braniff and Texas International had ceased serving Hobby, however, two other jet airlines, Hughes Airwest and Ozark Air Lines, had joined Southwest at the airport, with Southwest operating Boeing 727-200s as well as 737-200s nonstop to Austin, Corpus Christi, Dallas Love Field, Harlingen, Lubbock, San Antonio and its first destination outside Texas, New Orleans.[43] Hughes Airwest (owned by Howard Hughes) was flying nonstop to Las Vegas, Phoenix and Tucson and direct to Burbank (now Bob Hope Airport) and Orange County (now John Wayne Airport) while Ozark was flying nonstop to its hub in St. Louis; both airlines flew McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30s.[43] Hughes Airwest was acquired by and merged into Republic Airlines which in 1983 had a focus city operation at Hobby with McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30s, DC-9-50s and MD-80s nonstop to Chicago O'Hare Airport (ORD), Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW), Detroit, Las Vegas, Memphis, New Orleans and Phoenix.[44] By 1984, another airline flew nonstop Hobby to St. Louis: Air 1 Boeing 727-100s.[45] A number of commuter airlines were flying from Hobby to smaller cities in Texas and Louisiana, including Chaparral Airlines, Commutair, Eagle Commuter, Hammonds Air Service, Metroplex Airlines and Tejas Airlines.[43]

In 1987, Continental Airlines had a "dual hub" operation in Houston with a hub at Intercontinental Airport (IAH) and a second hub at Hobby.[46] In February 1987, Continental had nonstops from Hobby to Austin, Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York LaGuardia Airport, San Antonio and Washington D.C. National Airport. Nonstop "cross town" shuttle service was also being flown between HOU and IAH with Douglas DC-9-10s by Emerald Air operating as the "Houston Proud Express" or Continental with these flights using "CO" flight numbers with seven round trips a day. CO one-stops flew from Hobby to Bozeman, MT, Orlando, Sacramento and Tucson. Continental was operating up to 37 departures a day from HOU with Boeing 727-100s, 727-200s, 737-200s, 737-300s, Douglas DC-9-10s and McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30s. The airline shut down its hub at Hobby and was not serving the airport by the early 1990s although its regional affiliate Continental Express would return with "cross town" turboprop flights to IAH by the mid 1990s followed later by limited Continental mainline jet service.[47] Also in 1987, Pan Am was once again serving Hobby with daily nonstop Boeing 727-200 and Boeing 737-200 service from the airport to Miami, New York JFK Airport and Washington Dulles Airport with the flight to New York continuing on a direct one stop, no change of plane basis to Bermuda.[48]

In the fall of 1991, the OAG listed main line flights to Hobby on American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Northwest Airlines, Trans World Airlines (TWA) and United Airlines in addition to Southwest.[49] Other airlines jets at Hobby in the 1980s included Air Florida, Braniff, Eastern Air Lines, Emerald Air (operating independently and also on behalf of Continental Airlines as the aforementioned "Houston Proud Express" with DC-9s between HOU and IAH), the original Frontier Airlines, Muse Air, People Express, Republic Airlines and TranStar Airlines.[50] Alaska Airlines also served Hobby in 1990 via an interchange agreement with American Airlines which enabled direct Boeing 727-200s to Anchorage and Fairbanks via Dallas/Ft. Worth and Seattle.[51] At one point, Continental Airlines was operating Boeing 737-300s between Hobby and Houston Intercontinental and flying nonstop HOU to its Newark hub. In 2008 the airport handled 8.8 million passengers.[52] Only domestic US destinations and international destinations with border preclearance were being served, but in fall 2015 Southwest opened a new international terminal allowing it to fly to foreign cities.[53]

The headquarters for TranStar Airlines (formerly Muse Air before this new start up air carrier was acquired by Southwest Airlines) were at the airport.[54] Muse Air followed by TranStar operated a hub at Hobby flying McDonnell Douglas MD-80s, DC-9-50s and DC-9-30s nonstop to Austin, Brownsville, TX, Dallas Love Field, Las Vegas, Los Angeles (LAX), Lubbock, Ontario, CA, McAllen, TX, Miami, Midland/Odessa, New Orleans, Orlando, San Antonio, San Francisco, Tampa and Tulsa with direct service to San Diego and San Jose, CA at various times during the 1980s.[55] Several other airlines were based at the airport in the past as well, including Pioneer Airlines and Trans-Texas Airways (TTa) with the latter then changing its name to Texas International Airlines. Trans-Texas followed by Texas International operated a hub at the airport as well.[56][57] Pioneer and Texas International merged with Continental Airlines, Pioneer in 1955 and Texas International in 1982. Continental continued to use the former Texas International maintenance base at Hobby after the merger.[58]

21st century

 
The interior of the airport terminal

In May 2011, Southwest Airlines expressed interest in initiating new international flights from Hobby.[59]

On April 9, 2012, Houston Director of Aviation Mario Diaz announced support of international flights from Hobby after multiple studies of the economic impact on the entire city of Houston. On this day Southwest Airlines also debuted its new campaign, called Free Hobby. Supporters are asked to sign a petition. Southwest also started a website just for supporters of international flights from Hobby, freehobbyairport.com.[60]

United Airlines, Houston's other major carrier, which would later be forced to compete with Southwest on proposed international routes, has objected to the expansion plans, citing a study which concludes that the change would cost the Houston area jobs and result in a net reduction in GRP.[61]

Houston Mayor Annise Parker backed Southwest's fight to make Hobby an international airport on May 23, 2012.[62] On May 30, 2012, Houston's city council approved Southwest's request for international flights from Hobby.[63] The groundbreaking of the terminal expansion began in September 2013.[64] Five new gates (two arrival/departure gates and three arrival only gates) were added to accommodate both Boeing 737 and Airbus A320 family aircraft.[65] The expansion was estimated to have cost $156 million and was paid for by Southwest Airlines.[64] The expansion also included constructing a new parking garage as well as a re-organization and expansion of the security checkpoint and Southwest Airlines' check-in counter. Vertical construction was officially completed on October 15, 2015, and Southwest launched international flights that same day.[66][67]

Frontier Airlines announced its entry to the airport with direct flights to Cancun, Las Vegas, and Orlando starting in May 2022.[68] Just two months later Frontier Airlines announced a fourth flight from Hobby with a new Denver route starting in September. [69]

Facilities

Terminal

William P. Hobby Airport has a single terminal with two concourses (one domestic and one international) and 30 overall gates.[70] The domestic concourse, which has various retail shops and restaurants, opened in 2003 and replaced the original three concourses dating back to the 1950s.[71] It also includes an interfaith chapel.[72] The international concourse opened on October 15, 2015.[73]

In February 2020, Hobby Airport became the first airport in Texas to have full biometric entry and exit for passengers who are traveling internationally.[74]

In March 2022, Southwest announced a $250 million expansion project to add seven gates to Hobby's west concourse. The city of Houston is contributing $20 million toward the project. Six of the gates will be used exclusively by Southwest for domestic flights. The seventh new gate will be available for use by other airlines at the discretion of the Houston Airport System. The project is expected to take five years.[75]

Ground transportation

The Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County, Texas, or METRO, stops at Curbzone 13.[76] Currently, there are 4 bus lines that serve Hobby Airport. 040 Telephone/Heights provides local service to Eastwood Transit Center, Downtown, and North Shepard Park and Ride. 050 Broadway also provides service between the airport and Eastwood Transit Center via the Magnolia Park Transit Center. 073 Bellfort, which runs up to a 10 minute frequency during weekday, runs between the airport and Fannin South Transit Center, connecting to the Metro Rail Red Line. 088 Sagemont runs between the airport and San Jacinto College South Campus.

Courtesy vans are operated by various hotels and motels in and around the Houston area. There are courtesy telephones in the baggage claim areas to request pick-up for most hotels and motels.[76]

Shared-ride shuttle service was available at HOU until 2019 when SuperShuttle (now Transdev) ceased business, citing competition from ride-sharing services Uber and Lyft. Additionally, regularly scheduled bus and shuttle service is provided by various carriers to locations from HOU to areas outside metropolitan Houston and to Galveston and College Station. These services can be found in the baggage claim area.[76]

Taxis are available at Curb Zone 3.[76]Lyft and Uber are available at Curb Zone 5.

Other

There are several pieces located in and on the William P. Hobby Airport grounds: Artists Paul Kittleson and Carter Ernst created "Take-off," a stainless steel bird's nest showing interwoven branches created using industrial materials. The nest is 30 feet (9.1 m) wide and is held 20 feet (6.1 m) above the ground by three steel tree trunks. The nest is depicted floating above a subtropical garden. The artists created the work to depict the spirit of Houston's industrial force along the coastal plain. "Take-off" is located at Hobby's Broadway Street entrance.[77]

The Houston Air Route Traffic Control Center serves as the airport's ARTCC.[78]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinationsRefs
Allegiant Air Asheville, Knoxville, Phoenix/Mesa, Provo
Seasonal: Des Moines, Destin/Fort Walton Beach, Fayetteville/Bentonville, Las Vegas, Lexington, Savannah
American Eagle Dallas/Fort Worth [79]
Delta Air Lines Atlanta [80]
Frontier Airlines Cancún, Denver, Las Vegas, Orlando [81]
JSX Dallas–Love
Seasonal: Destin–Executive
[82]
Southwest Airlines Albuquerque, Atlanta, Austin, Baltimore, Belize City, Birmingham (AL), Cancún, Charlotte, Chicago–Midway, Columbus–Glenn, Corpus Christi, Cozumel, Dallas–Love, Denver, El Paso, Fort Lauderdale, Greenville/Spartanburg, Harlingen, Indianapolis, Jackson (MS), Jacksonville (FL), Kansas City, Las Vegas, Liberia (CR), Long Beach, Los Angeles, Louisville, Lubbock, Memphis, Miami, Midland/Odessa, Montego Bay, Nashville, New Orleans, New York–LaGuardia, Oakland, Oklahoma City, Omaha, Ontario, Orlando, Panama City (FL), Pensacola, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Pittsburgh, Puerto Vallarta, Raleigh/Durham, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose (CA), San José de Costa Rica–Juan Santamaría, San José del Cabo, San Juan, Savannah, St. Louis, Tampa, Tucson, Tulsa, Washington–National
Seasonal: Boston, Charleston (SC),[83] Colorado Springs, Destin/Fort Walton Beach,[84] Fort Myers, Orange County, Philadelphia, Punta Cana (resumes June 10, 2023),[85] Reno/Tahoe, Sacramento,[86] Sarasota[87]
[88]

Cargo

Statistics

Passenger numbers

Annual passenger traffic at HOU airport. See Wikidata query.

Top destinations

Busiest domestic routes from HOU (February 2022 - January 2023)[89]
Rank City Passengers Carriers
1 Dallas–Love, Texas 380,000 Southwest, JSX
2 Denver, Colorado 327,000 Frontier, Southwest
3 Atlanta, Georgia 325,000 Southwest, Delta
4 Las Vegas, Nevada 258,000 Allegiant, Frontier, Southwest
5 Chicago–Midway, Illinois 250,000 Southwest
6 Orlando, Florida 247,000 Frontier, Southwest
7 Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Arizona 228,000 Southwest
8 New Orleans, Louisiana 206,000 Southwest
9 San Antonio, Texas 177,000 Southwest
10 Baltimore, Maryland 171,000 Southwest
International routes from HOU, by ridership (October 2021 – September 2022)[90]
Rank City Passengers Carriers
1   Cancún, Mexico 274,843 Frontier, Southwest
2   San José del Cabo, Mexico 173,092 Southwest
3   Puerto Vallarta, Mexico 92,421 Southwest
4   San José—Santamaría, Costa Rica 88,582 Southwest
5   Liberia, Costa Rica 75,976 Southwest
6   Belize City—Goldson, Belize 67,749 Southwest
7   Cozumel, Mexico 67,184 Southwest
8   Montego Bay, Jamaica 48,015 Southwest

Accidents and incidents

  • On January 18, 1988, an Aero Astro Hawker Siddeley HS-125-600B crashed during an Instrument Landing System approach to runway 04, hitting powerlines 6,500 ft (2,000 m) short of the runway, one crewmember of the eight on board was killed.[91]
  • On November 22, 2004, a Business Jet Services Gulfstream Aerospace Gulfstream III crashed 5 km (3.1 mi) west of Hobby, striking a light pole on approach and killing all three on board.[92]
  • On November 5, 2005, a Houston Cardiac Electrophysiology Associates Cessna 500 Citation I stalled and crashed after takeoff, both occupants died.[93]
  • On June 9, 2016, a Cirrus SR20 stalled and crashed into a parking lot near the airport during a go-around. All three occupants died.[94]
  • On May 6, 2022, a Cessna 421C Golden Eagle registered in Mexico (XB-FQS) lost power in both engines shortly after takeoff. The plane made a forced landing in a residential neighborhood near the airport, skidding across the athletic field of a school and coming to rest in the backyards of nearby homes. None of the four occupants were injured.[95]

See also

References

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  55. ^ http://www.departedflights.com December 17, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, September 11, 1983 & July 20, 1985 Muse Air route maps & June 15, 1987 TranStar Airlines route map
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  58. ^ http://www.airliners.net June 14, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, photos of Continental B737-300 & MD-80 at Hobby Airport maintenance base (photos #0760119 & #0785511)
  59. ^ "Airport Director Report to The Budget and Fiscal Affairs Transportation, Technology and Infrastructure Committee Proposed International Terminal at Hobby". Houston Airport System. April 16, 2012. from the original on December 27, 2012. Retrieved August 5, 2013.
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External links

  • Official website  
  • The 1940 Air Terminal Museum at William P. Hobby Airport
  • FAA Airport Diagram (PDF), effective April 20, 2023
  • Resources for this airport:
    • AirNav airport information for KHOU
    • ASN accident history for HOU
    • FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker
    • NOAA/NWS weather observations: current, past three days
    • SkyVector aeronautical chart for KHOU
    • FAA current HOU delay information
  • Gonzalez, J. R. "1941 photos show scenes at Houston Municipal Airport". Houston Chronicle. May 10, 2010.

william, hobby, airport, iata, icao, khou, colloquially, referred, hobby, airport, houston, hobby, simply, hobby, international, airport, houston, texas, located, miles, from, downtown, houston, hobby, houston, oldest, commercial, airport, primary, airport, un. William P Hobby Airport IATA HOU ICAO KHOU FAA LID HOU colloquially referred to as Hobby Airport Houston Hobby or simply Hobby is an international airport in Houston Texas located 7 miles 11 km from downtown Houston 3 Hobby is Houston s oldest commercial airport and was its primary airport until the Houston Intercontinental Airport now known as the George Bush Intercontinental Airport opened in 1969 Hobby was initially closed after the opening of Houston Intercontinental however it was re opened after several years and became a secondary airport for domestic airline service and a center for corporate and private aviation William P Hobby AirportIATA HOUICAO KHOUFAA LID HOUWMO 72244SummaryAirport typePublicOwnerCity of HoustonOperatorHouston Airport SystemServesGreater HoustonLocationHouston Texas United StatesOpened1927 96 years ago 1927 Focus city forSouthwest AirlinesElevation AMSL46 ft 14 mCoordinates29 38 44 N 95 16 44 W 29 64556 N 95 27889 W 29 64556 95 27889 Coordinates 29 38 44 N 95 16 44 W 29 64556 N 95 27889 W 29 64556 95 27889Websitefly2houston wbr com wbr houMapsFAA diagram as of 2014HOUShow map of TexasHOUShow map of the United StatesRunwaysDirection Length Surfaceft m04 22 7 602 2 317 Concrete13L 31R 5 148 1 569 Concrete13R 31L 7 599 2 316 AsphaltStatistics 2022 Aircraft operations189 979Total Passengers13 113 866Source Federal Aviation Administration 1 2 Houston Hobby is an operating base for Southwest Airlines which has international and domestic flights from HOU and carries the vast majority of its passengers As of December 2017 Houston Hobby is the fifth largest airport in Southwest s network 4 Southwest opened its first international terminal at Houston Hobby and began service from Houston Hobby to Mexico and Central and South America on October 15 2015 5 The William P Hobby Airport covers 1 304 acres 528 ha and has three runways 1 6 Its original art deco terminal building the first passenger airline terminal in Houston now houses the 1940 Air Terminal Museum Hobby became the first 5 Star Airport in North America by Skytrax in 2022 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Women Airforce Service Pilots WASP in 1943 1 2 Airlines in the 1940s and 1950s 1 3 The jet age arrives 1 3 1 International service in the 1960s 1 4 Resumption of airline service 1 5 21st century 2 Facilities 2 1 Terminal 2 2 Ground transportation 2 3 Other 3 Airlines and destinations 3 1 Passenger 3 2 Cargo 4 Statistics 4 1 Passenger numbers 4 2 Top destinations 5 Accidents and incidents 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory Edit The 1940 Air Terminal Museum originally an air terminal opened in 1940 Hobby Airport opened in 1927 as a private landing field in a 600 acre 240 ha pasture known as W T Carter Field In the 1930s it was served by Braniff International Airways and Eastern Air Lines The site was acquired by the city of Houston and was named Houston Municipal Airport in 1937 8 The airport was renamed Howard R Hughes Airport in 1938 Howard Hughes was responsible for several improvements to the airport including its first control tower built in 1938 8 The airport s name changed back to Houston Municipal because Hughes was still alive at the time and regulations did not allow federal improvement funds for an airport named after a living person The city of Houston opened a new air terminal and hangar in 1940 Women Airforce Service Pilots WASP in 1943 Edit The first three Women Airforce Service Pilots WASP training classes were held at the Houston Municipal Airport in 1943 Airlines in the 1940s and 1950s Edit In June 1948 Braniff International Airways began international flights from Houston operated with Douglas DC 4 and DC 6s to South America via Cuba and Panama 9 In the June 1948 timetable the airline had two flights a week to Havana Cuba Panama City Panama via Balboa Canal Zone Guayaquil Ecuador Lima Peru and a third flight that skipped Guayaquil In 1949 Braniff flew direct via Lima to Rio de Janeiro Brazil and La Paz Bolivia 10 In 1950 Pan American World Airways Pan Am began nonstop Douglas DC 4 service to Mexico City On October 1 1950 Chicago and Southern Air Lines began flying new Lockheed Constellations nonstop to St Louis and direct to Chicago Midway Airport 11 Chicago amp Southern flew nonstop to New Orleans the sole purpose being to connect to the airline s daily Douglas DC 4 Caribbean Comet flights between New Orleans and Havana Cuba Kingston Jamaica and Caracas Venezuela as Chicago amp Southern did not then have local traffic rights between Houston and New Orleans 11 In 1953 Chicago amp Southern C amp S was acquired by and merged into Delta Air Lines giving Delta access to Houston for the first time 12 In 1954 Delta operating as Delta C amp S was flying a daily Convair 340 Houston New Orleans Havana Cuba Port au Prince Haiti Ciudad Trujillo now Santo Domingo Dominican Republic San Juan Puerto Rico 13 Also in 1954 an expanded terminal building opened to support the 53 640 airline flights that carried 910 047 passengers 14 The airport was renamed Houston International Airport the same year The April 1957 Official Airline Guide lists 26 weekday departures on Eastern 20 on Braniff plus four departures a week to from South America nine on Continental Airlines nine on Delta Air Lines nine on Trans Texas Airways four on National Airlines two on Pan American World Airways and one on American Airlines There were nonstops to New York City and Washington D C but not to Chicago or Denver or anywhere west of Colorado Later in 1957 KLM Royal Dutch Airlines started Douglas DC 7C flights to Amsterdam via Montreal In 1958 Delta was operating daily nonstop Douglas DC 7s to New York City and weekly DC 7s direct to Caracas Venezuela via New Orleans Delta called this latter service the El Petrolero 15 while Eastern Douglas DC 7s and Lockheed Constellations flew nonstop to New York City 16 The jet age arrives Edit Houston s first scheduled jets were Delta Douglas DC 8s nonstop to New York in December 1959 Cearley says they began on December 1 Braniff International introduced Boeing 707s in April 1960 nonstop to Dallas Love Field and direct to Chicago O Hare Airport Braniff Lockheed L 188 Electra propjets flew nonstop to Chicago Midway Airport and Dallas Love Field and direct to Denver Minneapolis St Paul Kansas City and Lubbock 17 In June 1960 Eastern Airlines Douglas DC 8s flew nonstop to New York City Idlewild Airport and to Atlanta in addition to Lockheed L 188 Electras nonstop to Washington D C National Airport with one stop Electras to Newark 18 In July 1960 KLM introduced Douglas DC 8 flights to Amsterdam via Montreal before moving to Houston Intercontinental Airport now George Bush Intercontinental Airport where they remain today with nonstop Boeing 787 flights to Amsterdam 19 On May 15 1960 Delta Air Lines operated the world s first Convair 880 scheduled passenger flight nonstop to New York City Idlewild Airport from Hobby 20 Delta would introduce Convair 880 flights nonstop to Chicago O Hare Airport St Louis and New Orleans from Houston in addition to its service to New York City 21 In June 1961 National Airlines Douglas DC 8s and Continental 707s began flying nonstop to Los Angeles and National Electras flew nonstop to Las Vegas San Diego and San Francisco These were Houston s first nonstops beyond El Paso 22 In 1963 Continental Vickers Viscounts flew Houston Austin San Angelo Midland Odessa El Paso Tucson Phoenix Los Angeles and Viscounts flew direct to Lubbock and Amarillo 23 In summer 1965 American Airlines only had one jet flight a day from Hobby a Boeing 707 flying Houston San Antonio El Paso Phoenix Oakland San Francisco 24 Eastern Boeing 727 100s flew nonstop to Washington D C Dulles Airport New Orleans and Corpus Christi and direct to New York Newark Airport and Boston 25 Eastern Boeing 720s flew nonstop to New York JFK Airport Atlanta New Orleans and San Antonio and direct to Boston and Philadelphia 26 By 1966 Houston based Trans Texas Airways TTa had introduced Douglas DC 9 10s with nonstop flights to Dallas Love Field Corpus Christi and Baton Rouge and direct to New Orleans 27 In 1966 Braniff was operating flights via interchange agreements with both Pan American World Airways Pan Am and United Airlines from Hobby The service with Pan Am flew to London England and Frankfurt Germany daily with Boeing 707s via at Dallas Love Field and Chicago O Hare Airport 28 The joint operation with United was flown with Boeing 720s twice daily Houston Dallas Denver Seattle and Houston Dallas Denver Portland OR Seattle 29 The same year Braniff BAC One Elevens flew nonstop to Dallas Love Field Fort Worth via Greater Southwest International Airport Tulsa and Corpus Christi and direct to Chicago O Hare Airport Minneapolis St Paul St Louis and Wichita 28 In 1967 the airport was renamed after a former Texas governor William P Hobby Besides the Braniff Pan Am and KLM services to Europe the airport had other long flights Braniff was flying nonstop from Hobby to Panama City Panama with Boeing 707s and Boeing 720s in the late 1960s 30 Braniff s April 1969 timetable lists nonstop 707 service to Hawaii 31 however Braniff flights from Houston to Hawaii didn t actually start until September 1 after the move to IAH 32 Hobby s 7600 ft runways would have been too short for 707 nonstop service to Hawaii citation needed Houston Intercontinental Airport IAH now George Bush Intercontinental Airport opened in June 1969 the airlines moved to Intercontinental and Hobby was left with no scheduled passenger service The Civil Aeronautics Administration recommended years earlier that Houston plan to replace Hobby 33 The Hobby Airport terminal International service in the 1960s Edit Previously KLM and Pan American World Airways Pan Am operated international flights from the International Building at Hobby until the late 1960s 34 In 1966 Pan Am was operating a daily Boeing 707 flight nonstop to Mexico City with continuing no change of plane service to Guatemala City Guatemala San Salvador El Salvador Managua Nicaragua San Jose Costa Rica and Panama City Panama 35 In 1969 both airlines moved to IAH and the International Building was demolished 36 Braniff International operated international service as well from the airport and in the spring of 1966 was operating nonstop Boeing 707 and Boeing 720 jet service twice a week to Panama City Panama with connections in Panama to other Braniff flights to South America 37 Also in 1966 Braniff was operating a joint international service via an interchange agreement with Pan Am to London England and Frankfurt Germany on a daily basis with Boeing 707 jetliners via intermediate stops at Dallas Love Field and Chicago O Hare Airport 28 Aeronaves de Mexico now Aeromexico served Hobby as well with flights to Mexico and in the spring of 1968 was operating Douglas DC 9 10 jet service nonstop to Monterrey with continuing no change of plane service several days a week to Guadalajara and Acapulco 38 Trans Texas Airways also served Mexico and in 1968 was operating direct no change of plane service from Hobby with Convair 600 turboprops eleven times a week to Monterrey and six times a week to Tampico and Veracruz via south Texas 39 Resumption of airline service Edit The first airline to resume passenger flights was Houston Metro Airlines a commuter airline which in early 1970 was flying cross town service with de Havilland Canada DHC 6 Twin Otters between Hobby and Houston Intercontinental Airport IAH with 14 weekday round trips 40 Jet airline service resumed on November 14 1971 when Southwest Airlines operating as an intrastate airline began nonstop Boeing 737 200s to Dallas Love Field DAL and San Antonio Southwest had initially launched service between Intercontinental Airport and Dallas Love Field before serving Hobby 41 Both Braniff International and Texas International resumed jet service into Hobby with nonstops to Dallas in competition with Southwest 42 By fall 1979 Braniff and Texas International had ceased serving Hobby however two other jet airlines Hughes Airwest and Ozark Air Lines had joined Southwest at the airport with Southwest operating Boeing 727 200s as well as 737 200s nonstop to Austin Corpus Christi Dallas Love Field Harlingen Lubbock San Antonio and its first destination outside Texas New Orleans 43 Hughes Airwest owned by Howard Hughes was flying nonstop to Las Vegas Phoenix and Tucson and direct to Burbank now Bob Hope Airport and Orange County now John Wayne Airport while Ozark was flying nonstop to its hub in St Louis both airlines flew McDonnell Douglas DC 9 30s 43 Hughes Airwest was acquired by and merged into Republic Airlines which in 1983 had a focus city operation at Hobby with McDonnell Douglas DC 9 30s DC 9 50s and MD 80s nonstop to Chicago O Hare Airport ORD Dallas Fort Worth DFW Detroit Las Vegas Memphis New Orleans and Phoenix 44 By 1984 another airline flew nonstop Hobby to St Louis Air 1 Boeing 727 100s 45 A number of commuter airlines were flying from Hobby to smaller cities in Texas and Louisiana including Chaparral Airlines Commutair Eagle Commuter Hammonds Air Service Metroplex Airlines and Tejas Airlines 43 In 1987 Continental Airlines had a dual hub operation in Houston with a hub at Intercontinental Airport IAH and a second hub at Hobby 46 In February 1987 Continental had nonstops from Hobby to Austin Denver Las Vegas Los Angeles Miami New Orleans New York LaGuardia Airport San Antonio and Washington D C National Airport Nonstop cross town shuttle service was also being flown between HOU and IAH with Douglas DC 9 10s by Emerald Air operating as the Houston Proud Express or Continental with these flights using CO flight numbers with seven round trips a day CO one stops flew from Hobby to Bozeman MT Orlando Sacramento and Tucson Continental was operating up to 37 departures a day from HOU with Boeing 727 100s 727 200s 737 200s 737 300s Douglas DC 9 10s and McDonnell Douglas DC 9 30s The airline shut down its hub at Hobby and was not serving the airport by the early 1990s although its regional affiliate Continental Express would return with cross town turboprop flights to IAH by the mid 1990s followed later by limited Continental mainline jet service 47 Also in 1987 Pan Am was once again serving Hobby with daily nonstop Boeing 727 200 and Boeing 737 200 service from the airport to Miami New York JFK Airport and Washington Dulles Airport with the flight to New York continuing on a direct one stop no change of plane basis to Bermuda 48 In the fall of 1991 the OAG listed main line flights to Hobby on American Airlines Delta Air Lines Northwest Airlines Trans World Airlines TWA and United Airlines in addition to Southwest 49 Other airlines jets at Hobby in the 1980s included Air Florida Braniff Eastern Air Lines Emerald Air operating independently and also on behalf of Continental Airlines as the aforementioned Houston Proud Express with DC 9s between HOU and IAH the original Frontier Airlines Muse Air People Express Republic Airlines and TranStar Airlines 50 Alaska Airlines also served Hobby in 1990 via an interchange agreement with American Airlines which enabled direct Boeing 727 200s to Anchorage and Fairbanks via Dallas Ft Worth and Seattle 51 At one point Continental Airlines was operating Boeing 737 300s between Hobby and Houston Intercontinental and flying nonstop HOU to its Newark hub In 2008 the airport handled 8 8 million passengers 52 Only domestic US destinations and international destinations with border preclearance were being served but in fall 2015 Southwest opened a new international terminal allowing it to fly to foreign cities 53 The headquarters for TranStar Airlines formerly Muse Air before this new start up air carrier was acquired by Southwest Airlines were at the airport 54 Muse Air followed by TranStar operated a hub at Hobby flying McDonnell Douglas MD 80s DC 9 50s and DC 9 30s nonstop to Austin Brownsville TX Dallas Love Field Las Vegas Los Angeles LAX Lubbock Ontario CA McAllen TX Miami Midland Odessa New Orleans Orlando San Antonio San Francisco Tampa and Tulsa with direct service to San Diego and San Jose CA at various times during the 1980s 55 Several other airlines were based at the airport in the past as well including Pioneer Airlines and Trans Texas Airways TTa with the latter then changing its name to Texas International Airlines Trans Texas followed by Texas International operated a hub at the airport as well 56 57 Pioneer and Texas International merged with Continental Airlines Pioneer in 1955 and Texas International in 1982 Continental continued to use the former Texas International maintenance base at Hobby after the merger 58 21st century Edit The interior of the airport terminal In May 2011 Southwest Airlines expressed interest in initiating new international flights from Hobby 59 On April 9 2012 Houston Director of Aviation Mario Diaz announced support of international flights from Hobby after multiple studies of the economic impact on the entire city of Houston On this day Southwest Airlines also debuted its new campaign called Free Hobby Supporters are asked to sign a petition Southwest also started a website just for supporters of international flights from Hobby freehobbyairport com 60 United Airlines Houston s other major carrier which would later be forced to compete with Southwest on proposed international routes has objected to the expansion plans citing a study which concludes that the change would cost the Houston area jobs and result in a net reduction in GRP 61 Houston Mayor Annise Parker backed Southwest s fight to make Hobby an international airport on May 23 2012 62 On May 30 2012 Houston s city council approved Southwest s request for international flights from Hobby 63 The groundbreaking of the terminal expansion began in September 2013 64 Five new gates two arrival departure gates and three arrival only gates were added to accommodate both Boeing 737 and Airbus A320 family aircraft 65 The expansion was estimated to have cost 156 million and was paid for by Southwest Airlines 64 The expansion also included constructing a new parking garage as well as a re organization and expansion of the security checkpoint and Southwest Airlines check in counter Vertical construction was officially completed on October 15 2015 and Southwest launched international flights that same day 66 67 Frontier Airlines announced its entry to the airport with direct flights to Cancun Las Vegas and Orlando starting in May 2022 68 Just two months later Frontier Airlines announced a fourth flight from Hobby with a new Denver route starting in September 69 Facilities EditTerminal Edit William P Hobby Airport has a single terminal with two concourses one domestic and one international and 30 overall gates 70 The domestic concourse which has various retail shops and restaurants opened in 2003 and replaced the original three concourses dating back to the 1950s 71 It also includes an interfaith chapel 72 The international concourse opened on October 15 2015 73 In February 2020 Hobby Airport became the first airport in Texas to have full biometric entry and exit for passengers who are traveling internationally 74 In March 2022 Southwest announced a 250 million expansion project to add seven gates to Hobby s west concourse The city of Houston is contributing 20 million toward the project Six of the gates will be used exclusively by Southwest for domestic flights The seventh new gate will be available for use by other airlines at the discretion of the Houston Airport System The project is expected to take five years 75 Ground transportation Edit The Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County Texas or METRO stops at Curbzone 13 76 Currently there are 4 bus lines that serve Hobby Airport 040 Telephone Heights provides local service to Eastwood Transit Center Downtown and North Shepard Park and Ride 050 Broadway also provides service between the airport and Eastwood Transit Center via the Magnolia Park Transit Center 073 Bellfort which runs up to a 10 minute frequency during weekday runs between the airport and Fannin South Transit Center connecting to the Metro Rail Red Line 088 Sagemont runs between the airport and San Jacinto College South Campus Courtesy vans are operated by various hotels and motels in and around the Houston area There are courtesy telephones in the baggage claim areas to request pick up for most hotels and motels 76 Shared ride shuttle service was available at HOU until 2019 when SuperShuttle now Transdev ceased business citing competition from ride sharing services Uber and Lyft Additionally regularly scheduled bus and shuttle service is provided by various carriers to locations from HOU to areas outside metropolitan Houston and to Galveston and College Station These services can be found in the baggage claim area 76 Taxis are available at Curb Zone 3 76 Lyft and Uber are available at Curb Zone 5 Other Edit There are several pieces located in and on the William P Hobby Airport grounds Artists Paul Kittleson and Carter Ernst created Take off a stainless steel bird s nest showing interwoven branches created using industrial materials The nest is 30 feet 9 1 m wide and is held 20 feet 6 1 m above the ground by three steel tree trunks The nest is depicted floating above a subtropical garden The artists created the work to depict the spirit of Houston s industrial force along the coastal plain Take off is located at Hobby s Broadway Street entrance 77 The Houston Air Route Traffic Control Center serves as the airport s ARTCC 78 Airlines and destinations EditPassenger Edit AirlinesDestinationsRefsAllegiant AirAsheville Knoxville Phoenix Mesa Provo Seasonal Des Moines Destin Fort Walton Beach Fayetteville Bentonville Las Vegas Lexington SavannahAmerican EagleDallas Fort Worth 79 Delta Air LinesAtlanta 80 Frontier AirlinesCancun Denver Las Vegas Orlando 81 JSXDallas Love Seasonal Destin Executive 82 Southwest AirlinesAlbuquerque Atlanta Austin Baltimore Belize City Birmingham AL Cancun Charlotte Chicago Midway Columbus Glenn Corpus Christi Cozumel Dallas Love Denver El Paso Fort Lauderdale Greenville Spartanburg Harlingen Indianapolis Jackson MS Jacksonville FL Kansas City Las Vegas Liberia CR Long Beach Los Angeles Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Midland Odessa Montego Bay Nashville New Orleans New York LaGuardia Oakland Oklahoma City Omaha Ontario Orlando Panama City FL Pensacola Phoenix Sky Harbor Pittsburgh Puerto Vallarta Raleigh Durham Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose CA San Jose de Costa Rica Juan Santamaria San Jose del Cabo San Juan Savannah St Louis Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington NationalSeasonal Boston Charleston SC 83 Colorado Springs Destin Fort Walton Beach 84 Fort Myers Orange County Philadelphia Punta Cana resumes June 10 2023 85 Reno Tahoe Sacramento 86 Sarasota 87 88 Cargo Edit AirlinesDestinationsAirNet ExpressColumbus RickenbackerStatistics EditPassenger numbers Edit Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Annual passenger traffic at HOU airport See Wikidata query Top destinations Edit Busiest domestic routes from HOU February 2022 January 2023 89 Rank City Passengers Carriers1 Dallas Love Texas 380 000 Southwest JSX2 Denver Colorado 327 000 Frontier Southwest3 Atlanta Georgia 325 000 Southwest Delta4 Las Vegas Nevada 258 000 Allegiant Frontier Southwest5 Chicago Midway Illinois 250 000 Southwest6 Orlando Florida 247 000 Frontier Southwest7 Phoenix Sky Harbor Arizona 228 000 Southwest8 New Orleans Louisiana 206 000 Southwest9 San Antonio Texas 177 000 Southwest10 Baltimore Maryland 171 000 SouthwestInternational routes from HOU by ridership October 2021 September 2022 90 Rank City Passengers Carriers1 Cancun Mexico 274 843 Frontier Southwest2 San Jose del Cabo Mexico 173 092 Southwest3 Puerto Vallarta Mexico 92 421 Southwest4 San Jose Santamaria Costa Rica 88 582 Southwest5 Liberia Costa Rica 75 976 Southwest6 Belize City Goldson Belize 67 749 Southwest7 Cozumel Mexico 67 184 Southwest8 Montego Bay Jamaica 48 015 SouthwestAccidents and incidents EditOn January 18 1988 an Aero Astro Hawker Siddeley HS 125 600B crashed during an Instrument Landing System approach to runway 04 hitting powerlines 6 500 ft 2 000 m short of the runway one crewmember of the eight on board was killed 91 On November 22 2004 a Business Jet Services Gulfstream Aerospace Gulfstream III crashed 5 km 3 1 mi west of Hobby striking a light pole on approach and killing all three on board 92 On November 5 2005 a Houston Cardiac Electrophysiology Associates Cessna 500 Citation I stalled and crashed after takeoff both occupants died 93 On June 9 2016 a Cirrus SR20 stalled and crashed into a parking lot near the airport during a go around All three occupants died 94 On May 6 2022 a Cessna 421C Golden Eagle registered in Mexico XB FQS lost power in both engines shortly after takeoff The plane made a forced landing in a residential neighborhood near the airport skidding across the athletic field of a school and coming to rest in the backyards of nearby homes None of the four occupants were injured 95 See also Edit Texas portal Aviation portalList of airports in the United States List of international airports by countryReferences Edit a b FAA Airport Form 5010 for HOU PDF effective August 11 2022 Traffic amp Statistics Houston Airport System April 2018 Archived from the original on May 7 2018 Retrieved April 22 2018 Frontier Airlines to change airports in Houston Archived October 26 2012 at the Wayback Machine Denver Business Journal Monday August 9 2010 Retrieved on March 27 2011 Southwest Airlines Newsroom Archived from the original on December 23 2016 Retrieved March 25 2018 Maxon Terry September 30 2013 Southwest Airlines Houston officials break ground on new Hobby international terminal Dallas Morning News blog Archived from the original on December 30 2013 Retrieved February 24 2014 HOU airport data at skyvector com skyvector com Retrieved August 28 2022 Houston William P Hobby Airport is the first 5 Star Airport in North America Skytrax January 7 2022 Retrieved February 17 2022 a b History of Hobby Airport Archived 2013 12 02 at the Wayback Machine Houston Airport System http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine June 4 1948 Braniff timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine April 1 1949 Braniff timetable a b http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine October 1 1960 Chicago amp Southern timetable http www deltamuseum org Archived September 29 2019 at the Wayback Machine Chicago and Southern C amp S Air Lines http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine August 1 1954 Delta C amp S timetable ART LEATHERWOOD June 15 2010 WILLIAM P HOBBY AIRPORT tshaonline org Archived from the original on May 8 2019 Retrieved July 29 2017 http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine August 1 1958 Delta timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine December 1 1958 Eastern timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine April 24 1960 Braniff timetable http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine June 1 1960 Eastern timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine July 15 1960 KLM timetable http www delta com Archived October 15 2016 at the Wayback Machine Delta History http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine October 30 1960 Delta timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine March 2 1963 National timetable amp July 1 1963 Continental timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine July 1 1963 Continental timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine June 28 1965 American timetable http www 60sairlineantique net Archived July 11 2017 at the Wayback Machine June 1 1965 Eastern Air Lines timetable http www 60sairlineantiques net Archived April 1 2019 at the Wayback Machine June 1 1965 Eastern timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine October 30 1966 Trans Texas timetable a b c http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine April 24 1966 Braniff timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine April 24 1966 Braniff timetable amp April 24 1966 United timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine July 1 1968 Braniff timetable http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine April 14 1969 Braniff timetable George W Cearley Braniff 1965 1986 WILLIAM P HOBBY AIRPORT Archived May 8 2019 at the Wayback Machine The Handbook of Texas Flashback Fridays Early Candid Views of Houston Hobby November 30 2012 Archived from the original on September 23 2015 Retrieved July 29 2017 Index of August 1 1966 Pan American system timetable www timetableimages com Archived from the original on October 21 2019 Retrieved October 21 2019 At 80 Hobby is still flying high Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 Index of April 24 1966 Braniff International Airways system timetable www timetableimages com Archived from the original on March 26 2019 Retrieved October 21 2019 Index of April 28 1968 Aeronaves de Mexico system timetable www timetableimages com Archived from the original on October 21 2019 Retrieved October 21 2019 Index of August 1968 Trans Texas Airways system timetable www timetableimages com Archived from the original on October 21 2019 Retrieved October 21 2019 http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine February 1 1970 Houston Metro Airlines timetable https www southwest com Archived March 17 2015 at the Wayback Machine Press Room Our History http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine Braniff winter 1974 timetable amp March 15 1978 Texas International timetable a b c http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine November 15 1979 Official Airline Guide http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine July 1 1983 Official Airline Guide http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine June 1 1984 Air 1 route map http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine February 1 1987 Continental timetable http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine October 1 1991 amp April 2 1995 editions Official Airline Guide https www departedflights com PA020187 html dead link http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine October 1 1991 Official Airline Guide http www departed flights April 1 1981 amp February 15 1985 Official Airline Guide http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine July 1 1990 Alaska timetable fly2houston Houston Airport System 2012 Archived from the original on February 22 2012 Retrieved April 16 2012 Associated The May 31 2012 Southwest to offer international flights from Houston Travel The Seattle Times Seattletimes nwsource com Archived from the original on July 16 2012 Retrieved November 7 2012 MuseAir com www museair com Archived from the original on December 31 2013 Retrieved July 29 2017 http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine September 11 1983 amp July 20 1985 Muse Air route maps amp June 15 1987 TranStar Airlines route map http www timetableimages com Archived February 2 2001 at the Wayback Machine Aug 1968 Trans Texas Airways system timetable route map http www departedflights com Archived December 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine July 15 1981 Texas International route map http www airliners net Archived June 14 2016 at the Wayback Machine photos of Continental B737 300 amp MD 80 at Hobby Airport maintenance base photos 0760119 amp 0785511 Airport Director Report to The Budget and Fiscal Affairs Transportation Technology and Infrastructure Committee Proposed International Terminal at Hobby Houston Airport System April 16 2012 Archived from the original on December 27 2012 Retrieved August 5 2013 freehobbyairport com United Continental Holdings Inc Investor Relations News Ir unitedcontinentalholdings com Archived from the original on July 9 2012 Retrieved November 7 2012 Houston Mayor Annise Parker gives details of 100 million Hobby Airport expansion abc13 com Abclocal go com May 23 2012 Archived from the original on March 1 2013 Retrieved November 7 2012 City Council approves Hobby Airport expansion to allow Southwest international flights United says it will cut jobs abc13 com Abclocal go com May 30 2012 Archived from the original on March 1 2013 Retrieved November 7 2012 a b Hobby International Airport is Underway Southwest Airlines will break ground September 2013 fly2houston Houston Airport System June 4 2013 Archived from the original on July 31 2013 Retrieved August 5 2013 Proposed FIS Facility Houston Airport System May 7 2012 Archived from the original on December 27 2012 Retrieved August 5 2013 Martin Joe May 10 2015 Hobby s new international terminal already attracting other airlines bizjournals com Archived from the original on May 1 2015 Retrieved March 16 2018 http www oaoa com news state article 9cdba4cf c323 576a b289 84279f831336 html dead link Mazo Edgardo Gimenez January 18 2022 Frontier will operate flights between Cancun and Houston Hobby Aviacionline com in Spanish Retrieved February 17 2022 Frontier Airlines adds new Houston Denver route from Hobby Airport www bizjournals com Retrieved August 12 2022 Houston Airport HOU Interactive Map Retrieved October 7 2020 Houston Airport System March 10 2005 Archived from the original on March 10 2005 Retrieved July 3 2020 Interfaith Chapel Archived 2008 02 08 at the Wayback Machine of William P Hobby Airport Houston Airport System Hobby Airport opens international terminal October 15 2015 Retrieved October 7 2020 Hobby Airport Launches Simplified Arrivals for International Passengers Press release Houston Texas Houston Airport System February 20 2020 Archived from the original on September 23 2020 Retrieved September 23 2020 Southwest Airlines embarks on 250 million terminal expansion at Hobby Airport a b c d Ground Transportation Archived December 21 2008 at the Wayback Machine William P Hobby Airport Retrieved on November 22 2008 Hobby Airport Unveils New Original Artwork Archive Houston Airport System March 25 2010 Retrieved on March 7 2011 KHOU Archived March 6 2008 at the Wayback Machine Airnav com Flight schedules and notifications Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved January 7 2017 FLIGHT SCHEDULES Archived from the original on June 21 2015 Retrieved January 7 2017 Frontier Retrieved March 4 2018 Where we fly Retrieved October 22 2020 https wieck swa production s3 us west 1 amazonaws com page 3b00a21770a21c5c30a52599d18aed48 attachment 562083c97b2493e09a2e00b955ed8671dd7292e8 bare URL Southwest Airlines Check Flight Schedules Southwest Airlines 1H23 International Network Additions 26JAN23 Aeroroutes Retrieved January 27 2023 https wieck swa production s3 us west 1 amazonaws com page 3b00a21770a21c5c30a52599d18aed48 attachment 562083c97b2493e09a2e00b955ed8671dd7292e8 bare URL https wieck swa production s3 us west 1 amazonaws com page 3b00a21770a21c5c30a52599d18aed48 attachment 562083c97b2493e09a2e00b955ed8671dd7292e8 bare URL Check Flight Schedules Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved January 7 2017 RITA BTS Transtats Transtats bts gov Retrieved April 17 2023 International Report Passengers Department of Transportation Data Portal data transportation gov Retrieved July 26 2021 Accident description for XA KUT at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N85VT at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N505K at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N4252G at the Aviation Safety Network Sharma Ahmed May 6 2022 Small airplane crashes near Hobby Airport Dobie 9th Grade Center no injuries reported FOX 26 Houston Retrieved May 8 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to William P Hobby Airport Official website Houston Airport System Houston Airports Today television show The 1940 Air Terminal Museum at William P Hobby Airport FAA Airport Diagram PDF effective April 20 2023 Resources for this airport AirNav airport information for KHOU ASN accident history for HOU FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker NOAA NWS weather observations current past three days SkyVector aeronautical chart for KHOU FAA current HOU delay information Gonzalez J R 1941 photos show scenes at Houston Municipal Airport Houston Chronicle May 10 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William P Hobby Airport amp oldid 1150612600, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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