Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport

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The Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport (BHM/KBHM) (formerly Birmingham Municipal Airport and Birmingham International Airport) is the major airport serving Birmingham and Central Alabama. It is located four miles northeast of downtown Birmingham, near the interchange of I-20 and I-59. The airport serves approximately 3.2 million passengers annually, and is the largest and busiest airport in the state, offering 80 daily departures to 25 cities nonstop and 35 cities direct.

History

The airport terminal as it appeared in February 1947. Photograph by Charles Preston. courtesy BPL Archives

On May 31, 1931, the Birmingham Airport, then a two-story Georgian-style brick terminal surrounded by open fields and a single runway, opened with day-long ceremonies and an air show. Hundreds came to witness the Birmingham debut of commercial passenger service with a stop by American Airways along its Atlanta, Georgia to Fort Worth, Texas route. With additional service from Eastern Airlines in 1934 a second runway was added.

During World War II the entire airport was leased to the Army Air Corps for $1 a year. The Corps improved the property by acquiring land, paving more taxiways, constructing an air traffic control tower, and building a complex of aircraft modification buildings, later sold to the Hayes International Corporation, a major employer which continued to work on military contracts after the war.

Passengers boarding a Lockheed Constellation operated by Eastern Airlines. Undated photograph by Charles Preston. courtesy BPL Archives

In August 1948 the Air Corp's lease was terminated and the facility returned to the city's control. Southern Airways and Capitol Airways began servicing the airport and runway 6/24 was extended to 10,000 feet to serve larger craft. When Capitol merged with United Air Lines, the first jet planes began landing at Birmingham. A new 87-foot-tall air traffic control tower was constructed in 1962 and went into service in 1964.

The present two-story terminal building was completed in 1973, with a total of 15 aircraft gates and a 1,600-space parking deck. In 1976 the newly-completed terminal was given the name Seibels/Bryan Airport Terminal Building to honor mayor George Seibels and city councilman John E. Bryan.

In June 1986 the Birmingham Airport Authority was created by the Birmingham City Council. At the time, the Birmingham Airport offered 38 daily departures. By December 1987, 43 cities could be reached by non-stop and/or direct service from one of eight airlines (American, Eastern, Piedmont, Northwest, USAir, Delta, Southwest and United). By October 1988, the Birmingham Airport offered 65 daily departures and served 1.9 million passengers.

In 1993, as the airport marked the completion of a major terminal renovation, flights were up to 77 departures per day, serving nearly 2.1 million passengers that year. Direct service was added to destinations in Mexico and Canada and on October 20, 1993 the name was officially changed to Birmingham International Airport.

By 2000 air traffic was up to 81 daily departures with non-stop service to 28 cities and direct flights to 48 cities. That year a new 211-foot-tall brick-clad air traffic control tower was constructed at the south end of the terminal building and was placed into service in March 2001. The 1962 tower was demolished in 2004 by Tomlin Excavating of Tarrant. The cab of the tower was salvaged and utilized as part of an exhibit at the Southern Museum of Flight.

In 2005, the number of passengers rebounded from the effect of the 2001 terrorist attacks to once again cross the 3 million mark. In 2006, Birmingham International Airport celebrated its 75th year of serving the central Alabama region. An extension of runway 6/24 to 12,002 feet gives Birmingham International Airport the capacity to serve fully-loaded Boeing 747s.

In 2008 Birmingham mayor Larry Langford proposed renaming the airport Birmingham Shuttlesworth International Airport to honor Civil Rights leader Fred Shuttlesworth. The proposal was received favorably by the Airport Authority, which voted to make the change on July 16, 2008. It must still be approved by the Federal Aviation Administration before it becomes official.

Incidents

No general carrier crashed have occurred at the Birmingham International Airport. Two fatal incidents involving smaller commercial craft have taken place. The most significant occurred on July 10, 1991 when L'Express Airlines Flight 508 crashed, killing 13. Eight other fatal incidents involving private or military craft have occurred at the airport since 1962.

Expansions

The runway was expanded in 1956 with new approach lights which extended into the Beechwood subdivision of the Inglenook neighborhood. Residents protested the expansion, calling the runway a "nuisance" and calling for the city to purchase their homes before extending the runway.

A major terminal expansion was completed in 1993. The $50.4 million project involved the construction of a new two-level roadway for arrivals and departures and a complete refurbishment of existing terminal spaces. KPS Group created the design, with a steel canopy over roadway which bends around the semi-circular terminal and with new vaulted skylights and lofty interiors, including a new centralized baggage claim area.

A 2,000 foot expansion to runway 6-24 was dedicated on July 23, 2007 after five years of work, making the runway 12,000 feet in length. The extension now provides enough runway length for a fully-loaded and fueled Boeing 747 to land or take off in Birmingham.

In 2008 the airport completed a $20 million Air Cargo Complex expansion and also resurfaced the Air Carrier Apron area. That same year, officials announced a new terminal expansion to include adding another concourse and baggage screening area, with the possibility of accommodating a United States Customs inspection station. In addition the airport parking deck would be cleaned and refurbished with new covered crossings to the terminal. The project is expected to begin in January 2011 for a cost of approximately $193 million. The expansion has been designed by KPS Group.

Military Use

The airfield is capable of handling all aircraft types. The main runway is 12,000 feet long. The secondary runway is 7,100 feet long. A Category II instrument landing system allows operations in visibility as low as a quarter mile.

The Air National Guard has a base which includes a wing of KC-135R air tankers. In the past, the air guard unit operated reconnaissance aircraft. There is also an aviation support facility for the Army National Guard.

A large aircraft modification facility, originally built as the Betchel-McCone-Parsons Airplane Modification Plant for refitting B-34 and B-29 bombers during World War II, is presently operated by Alabama Aircraft Industries. There are also two fixed base operators and numerous corporate hangars.

Concourses

BHM has one terminal building and is divided into 2 concourses, B and C.

Concourse B

Gates B1-B6

  • American Airlines Gate B1 (Dallas/Fort Worth)
    • American Eagle Gate B1 (Miami [begins November 19])
  • Continental Express operated by ExpressJet Airlines (Houston-Intercontinental)
  • US Airways Gates B2, B4, and B6
    • US Airways Express operated by Mesa Airlines (Charlotte)
    • US Airways Express operated by PSA Airlines (Charlotte, Philadelphia)

Concourse C

  • Gates C1 and C3, United Airlines
    • United Express operated by Mesa Airlines (Chicago-O'Hare)
    • United Express operated by SkyWest (Denver)
    • United Express operated by Trans States Airlines (Chicago-O'Hare)
  • Gates C2, C4, C6, and C8 Delta Airlines (Atlanta)
    • Delta Connection operated by Atlantic Southeast Airlines (Atlanta)
    • Delta Connection operated by Comair (Detroit [ends December 16], New York-LaGuardia)
    • Delta Connection operated by Pinnacle Airlines (Atlanta, Detroit, Memphis, Minneapolis/St. Paul)
  • Gates C10, C12, and C14 Southwest Airlines (Baltimore, Chicago-Midway, Dallas-Love, Houston-Hobby, Jacksonville, Las Vegas, Louisville, Nashville, New Orleans, Orlando, Phoenix, St. Louis, Tampa)
  • Gates C5, C7, C9, and C11 are not currently in use. There is no gate C13.

Parking deck

The single largest source of revenue for the Birmingham Airport Authority is parking fees. The authority operates a 7-story, 5,600-space parking deck for long and short-term parking as well as a 900-space satellite lot with shuttle service to the terminal. Another small "cell phone lot" is used by people waiting to pick up arriving passengers.

In January 2008 the Authority voted to increase long-term parking fees from $8 to $10 per day beginning February 1. The increase was expected to add $2 million in annual revenue. The daily parking rate was last raised on April 1, 2002 from $7 to $8. Short term parking is $1 per hour.

See also

External links

References

  • "Beechwood Homeowners Go To Court". (September 1, 1956) Birmingham Post-Herald
  • "Featured Artists at the Airport." (January 9, 1993) Birmingham News
  • "Negli USA: L'Apliamento dell'Aeropuerto di Birmingham, Alabama/The Expansion of the Birmingham, Alabama Airport." (Summer 1994) Materia: Rivista D'Architettura/An Architectural Review. No. 16: "Naturae e Architettura/Nature and Architecture". ISSN 1121-0516
  • McCauley, Charles R. (November 7, 2003) "Old tower to be demolished." Birmingham News
  • McCauley, Charles R. (July 24, 2007) "Longer runway credited with saving Air Guard unit." Birmingham News
  • NTSB Aviation Accident Data and Synopses database. National Transportation Safety Board - accessed December 2007
  • "Birmingham International Airport (U.S.)." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 8 Apr 2008, 18:10 UTC. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 8 Apr 2008 [1].
  • McCauley, Charles R. (April 8, 2008) "Birmingham airport managers keep international flights in sight." Birmingham News
  • McCauley, Charles R. (June 13, 2008) "Continental will end Birmingham flights to Cleveland." Birmingham News
  • McCauley, Charles R. (June 26, 2008) "Birmingham International Airport directors favor name change to honor Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth." Birmingham News
  • MacDonald, Ginny (October 4, 2009) "Birmingham airport plans terminal overhaul." Birmingham News
  • DIel, Stan (September 1, 2010) "Airport update designs revealed." Birmingham News