John F. Kennedy International Airport
John F. Kennedy International Airport |
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Characteristics | |
ICAO code | KJFK |
IATA code | JFK |
Coordinates | |
Height above MSL | 4 m (13 ft ) |
Transport links | |
Distance from the city center | 15 miles east of New York City |
Street | I-678 / NY 27 / NY 878 / Belt Parkway |
Local transport | AirTrain JFK , bus |
Basic data | |
opening | July 31, 1948 |
operator | Port Authority of New York and New Jersey |
surface | 1995 ha |
Terminals | 6th |
Passengers | 62,551,072 (2019) |
Air freight | 1,302,004 t (2019) |
Flight movements |
456,060 (2019) |
Employees | 40,844 (2019) |
Runways | |
04R / 22L | 2560 m × 61 m asphalt |
04L / 22R | 3682 m × 61 m concrete |
13R / 31L | 4423 m × 61 m concrete |
13L / 31R | 3048 m × 46 m concrete |
The John F. Kennedy International Airport ( IATA : JFK , ICAO : KJFK ) is in front of Newark and LaGuardia is the largest commercial airport in the greater New York . The airport, operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey , serves as a hub for American Airlines , Delta Air Lines and JetBlue Airways . In 2019, 62.6 million passengers were carried, making JFK the sixth largest airport in the USA (after Atlanta , Los Angeles , Chicago-O'Hare , Dallas / Fort Worth and Denver ) and ranked 20th in a global comparison of airports .
Location and transport links
John F. Kennedy International Airport is located 15 miles east of Manhattan in the Jamaica borough of Queens borough on Jamaica Bay . The passenger terminals are connected by Interstate 678 , which is also referred to at this point as the Van Wyck Expressway, and the JFK Expressway with the Belt Parkway and New York State Routes 27 and 878 , which run north of the airport.
The airport is connected to the local transport network via the AirTrain JFK . There are also several bus routes that run regularly. The shuttle bus goes to Grand Central Station and a local Q10 LTD bus goes to Jefferson Boulevard subway station. In addition to the bus line Q10 LTD, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority also operates the bus lines Q3, Q6, Q7, Q10 and B15, which connect the airport with parts of the city in the area. However, some of these only stop in the cargo area.
history
Construction of the airport began in April 1942 when about four square kilometers of swampy tideland next to the Idlewild golf course were drained. Because of its location, the airport was initially also called Idlewild Airport . To date it has been expanded five times.
The first commercial flights began on July 9, 1948. On July 31, 1948, it was officially inaugurated as New York International Airport . Around 150 million US dollars were invested in the first construction phase up to the end of 1948.
On December 24, 1963, by resolution of the Mayor and City Council of New York City and the airport company, the airport was renamed John F. Kennedy International Airport , after US President John F. Kennedy , who had been assassinated about a month earlier .
In 1978, in the so-called Lufthansa robbery, around six million US dollars in cash and jewels were stolen from rooms at the airport. It was the most successful raid in American history.
In 2000 the airport passed the one billion passenger mark since it opened.
On June 2, 2007, the American FBI uncovered plans for a terrorist attack. Terrorists from the Caribbean wanted to blow up the more than 80 kilometers long fuel lines that also supply the second major city airport. However, the planning was still in a very early phase.
The total volume of investments to date has reached 8.4 billion US dollars. The airport contributes approximately US $ 52.7 billion to the economic output of the New York and New Jersey area. Around 284,000 jobs are directly or indirectly dependent on the airport. In terms of wages and salaries, over 17.7 billion US dollars are paid annually (2019). In 2019, 40,844 people were employed directly at the airport.
Airport facilities
The John F. Kennedy International Airport covers an area of 1995 hectares.
Runways
The airport's runway system consists of two parallel, perpendicular pairs of runways, one of which allows parallel operation, as the runways are more than 1525 meters apart. The longest runway is marked 13R / 31L and is 4423 meters long and 61 meters wide. In 2010 it was widened by 15 meters to 61 meters and built from concrete instead of asphalt. Runway 13L / 31R, which is 3,048 meters long and 46 meters wide, runs parallel to it. The runway 13L / 31R was closed from April 2019 to November 2019 in order to widen it to 61 meters, to equip it with a concrete surface and to modernize it in other ways. The runway 04L / 22R is 3682 meters long and 61 meters wide. It was modernized in 2015. The shortest runway is marked 04R / 22L and is 2560 meters long and 61 meters wide. The runway 04R / 22L is the only runway with an asphalt surface, the other runways have a concrete surface. The runways 04L / 22R and 13R / 31L are mainly used for departures, while the runways 04R / 22L and 13L / 31R are mainly used for arrivals.
Passenger terminals
The airport has six passenger terminals : 1, 2, 4, 5, 7 and 8. According to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, these are equipped with a total of 131 gates . With the exception of Terminal 2, international flights can be handled at all terminals. All hangars are connected to each other by the AirTrain. The passenger terminals are to be converted into a northern and a southern terminal complex by 2025.
Terminal 1
The new Terminal 1 opened on May 14, 1998, 50 years after the opening of John F. Kennedy International Airport. It was built by the Terminal One Group and is still operated by them today. This is a consortium of Air France , Japan Airlines , Korean Air and Lufthansa . Next to Terminal 4, Terminal 1 is the only terminal that has the capacity to handle the Airbus A380 . It is operated by Air France on the route from Paris-Charles-de-Gaulle airport, by Lufthansa on the route from Frankfurt am Main airport , by Korean Air on the route from Incheon airport and by Singapore Airlines (from Frankfurt am Main with the A380 (from Terminal 4)). Terminal 1 has eleven gates.
Other airlines that use Terminal 1 in addition to the members of Terminal One Group are Aeroflot , Air China , Air Italy , Alitalia , Austrian Airlines , Azerbaijan Airlines , Brussels Airlines , Cayman Airways , China Eastern Airlines , EVA Air , Interjet , Norwegian Air Shuttle , Philippine Airlines , Royal Air Maroc , Saudi Arabian Airlines , Turkish Airlines and Viva Aerobus .
Terminal 2
Terminal 2 opened in 1962 as the main hub for Northeast Airlines , Braniff International Airways and Northwest Airlines . After Northeast Airlines and Braniff ceased operations, Pan American took over World Airways , and Delta Air Lines later expanded operations from Terminal 2. Terminal 2 has ten gates.
Delta Air Lines is the only user of Terminal 2 today and handles domestic flights there.
Terminal 4
Terminal 4, the former arrival building for international flights, was completely rebuilt and put back into operation on May 24, 2001. For the first time, arrivals and departures at the airport have been distributed over two different levels, which has led to considerable improvements in handling. The terminal was later converted to handle the Airbus A380 . A welcome center was opened in 2009. By 2013, Delta Air Lines had partially renovated it and added nine new gates . Today Terminal 4 is equipped with 36 piers.
In addition to Delta Air Lines, also use Aeroméxico , Air Europa , Air India , Air Serbia , Asiana Airlines , Caribbean Airlines , China Airlines , China Southern Airlines , Copa Airlines , Delta Air Lines , EgyptAir , El Al , Emirates , Etihad Airways , Kenya Airways , KLM Royal Dutch Airlines , Kuwait Airways , Singapore Airlines , South African Airways , Swiss , Thomas Cook Airlines , Uzbekistan Airways , Virgin Atlantic Airways , Volaris , Westjet Airlines and Xiamen Air the terminal. In addition, international arrivals are handled by Jetblue Airways in Terminal 4 from 10:30 p.m. to 5:00 a.m.
Terminal 5
The TWA Flight Center is the old Terminal 5. At times it was empty and was only accessible from the outside. It was built in 1962 based on a design by Eero Saarinen for Trans World Airlines (TWA) and has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 2005 . Today the new Terminal 5, which went into operation on October 1, 2008, behind the TWA Flight Center, forms the basis of JetBlue Airways . At the time of opening, Terminal 5 was equipped with 26 piers and designed to handle 20 million passengers a year. It was expanded from 2012 to 2014 as part of the T5i project to be able to handle international arrivals from Jetblue Airways. Today it has 29 gates. In 2015 it was confirmed that the original building would be converted into a hotel for passengers by 2018.
In addition to Jetblue Airways, Aer Lingus , Cape Air , Hawaiian Airlines and TAP Air Portugal also use Terminal 5.
Terminal 7
Terminal 7 opened in 1970 and was mainly used for handling British air routes. It was renovated and expanded from 1989 to 1991. Another renovation was completed in 2003. Today it is operated by British Airways . It has twelve gates.
In addition to British Airways, Aerolíneas Argentinas , Alaska Airlines , All Nippon Airways , Eurowings , Iberia , Icelandair , LOT and Ukraine International Airlines also use the terminal. Qatar Airways flights are also handled in Terminal 7 from midnight to midday. However, British Airways has announced that it will move to Terminal 8. The airline Iberia is also to move to Terminal 8.
Terminal 8
Terminal 8 is operated by American Airlines . It was built up to 2007 from the renovation of the old Terminals 8 and 9. Terminal 5 was partly put into operation in 2005. According to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey , it consists of three concourses with a total of 34 gates, while American Airlines itself specifies two concourses with 29 gates.
In addition to American Airlines, Cathay Pacific , Ethiopian Airlines , Finnair , LATAM , Qantas Airways and Royal Jordanian also use the terminal. Qatar Airways flights are also handled in Terminal 8 from 12 noon to midnight . Air Berlin was also one of the users of Terminal 8 until international flights were discontinued in 2017 .
Former terminals
Old Terminal 1
The former Terminal 1 was built for Eastern Air Lines in 1948 . After it ceased operations in 1990, it was used by other airlines until November 1993 and demolished in 1995.
Terminal 3
Terminal 3 was first used by Pan American World Airways when it opened in 1960 . This also referred to the terminal as Worldport. After Pan Am was taken over by Delta Air Lines , it was operated from 1993 to 2013 and then demolished until 2015. Today the area serves as a parking area for 15 aircraft.
Old Terminal 4
Terminals 4A and 4B were originally opened in 1958 as the International Arrivals Building and demolished for the construction of Terminal 4.
Terminal 6
Terminal 6, the "Sundrome" - formerly used by National Airlines and then by TWA - was completed in 1969 and opened in 1970. It was designed by Ieoh Ming Pei . Until the opening of the new Terminal 5 in 2008, it was used by Jetblue Airways . As of 2011, it was demolished.
Old Terminal 8
The old Terminal 8 was completed in 1960 and served to handle international flights for American airlines. Most recently it was mainly used by American Airlines .
Old Terminal 9
Terminal 9 was used by United Airlines and originally opened in 1959. Most recently it was mainly used by American Airlines .
Freight terminals
The cargo area of John F. Kennedy International Airport extends over 688 hectares and is mainly used for handling international air cargo. Freight terminals are operated by Air France-KLM , American Airlines , China Airlines , DHL Aviation and Korean Air , among others . There is also a terminal for handling animals, known as The ARK.
AirTrain JFK
The numerous terminal buildings, several parking garages and two subway stops of the New York Subway are connected by an airport train called AirTrain JFK . The airport railway was put into operation in 2003.
Other infrastructure
The Federal Aviation Administration operates a control tower with a height of 98 meters, which was put into operation in 1994. It is located on the apron of Terminal 4 and is connected to it by a bridge.
The fuel storage capacity is 144,000 cubic meters divided into 62 tanks, 40 of which are located within a radius of 80 kilometers and are connected to the airport by underground pipes .
The power supply is regulated by its own power plant , which has a total of 90 megawatts of power using the latest design gas turbines and whose waste heat is sufficient to supply the entire complex with district heating and hot water. The daily water requirement at the airport is 13,500 m³.
Airlines
The John F. Kennedy International Airport is the home airport and the main hub of the low-cost airline Jetblue Airways . In addition, it serves airlines American Airlines and Delta Air Lines as the aviation hub . Delta Air Lines is the largest airline at John F. Kennedy International Airport after passengers, followed by Jetblue Airways and American Airlines. In total, John F. Kennedy International Airport is used by around 70 passenger airlines. It is also served by the pure cargo airlines ABX Air , ASL , Atlas Air , CAL Cargo Airlines , Cargolux , DHL Aviation , FedEx , Kalitta Air , Nippon Cargo Airlines , Polar Air Cargo , Silk Way West Airlines , Southern Air and UPS Airlines .
The John F. Kennedy International Airport also served as a hub for the former passenger airlines Eastern Air Lines , Pan American World Airways , Tower Air and Trans World Airlines . National Airlines was also an important user of the airport. The former cargo airlines Evergreen International Airlines and Gemini Air Cargo also used John F. Kennedy International Airport as a hub.
Traffic figures
Traffic figures for John F. Kennedy International Airport 1984–2019 | ||||||
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year | Passenger volume | Air freight ( tons ) | Airmail (tons) | Flight movements | ||
National | International | total | ||||
1949 | - | - | 222,620 | 4.155 | 1,043 | 81,115 |
1960 | - | - | 8,803,665 | 125.241 | 40,023 | 248,686 |
1970 | - | - | 19.096.705 | 689.049 | 130,528 | 365.848 |
1980 | - | - | 26,796,066 | 1,061,238 | 129,189 | 307,527 |
1984 | 15.091.913 | 14,842,866 | 29,934,779 | 1,120,907 | 137.715 | 306.737 |
1985 | 13,980,375 | 14,964,913 | 28,945,288 | 980.081 | 124,779 | 286.076 |
1986 | 13.251.906 | 13,940,953 | 27,192,859 | 994.606 | 101,961 | 279.153 |
1987 | 14,354,347 | 15,838,130 | 30.192.477 | 1,072,901 | 113,000 | 285.909 |
1988 | 14.416.309 | 16,749,367 | 31.165.676 | 1,180,144 | 119.225 | 304,490 |
1989 | 13,631,503 | 16,691,574 | 30,323,077 | 1,259,139 | 113.384 | 305.058 |
1990 | 13,043,744 | 16.750.606 | 29,794,350 | 1,207,628 | 115.095 | 303.716 |
1991 | 11,672,446 | 14,556,622 | 26.229.068 | 1,255,223 | 91,877 | 277.761 |
1992 | 12,657,439 | 15,103,473 | 27.760.912 | 1,255,400 | 95,968 | 323,448 |
1993 | 11,781,813 | 15.015.036 | 26,796,849 | 1,282,671 | 99,739 | 333.813 |
1994 | 12.909.234 | 15.910.135 | 28,819,369 | 1,360,715 | 102.085 | 343,602 |
1995 | 13,313,373 | 17,064,206 | 30,377,579 | 1,485,676 | 106,618 | 340.124 |
1996 | 13,702,255 | 17,453,241 | 31.155.496 | 1,512,776 | 124.054 | 355.214 |
1997 | 13,911,627 | 17,445,804 | 31,357,431 | 1,544,287 | 121,687 | 353.171 |
1998 | 13,214,567 | 17,844,528 | 31,059,095 | 1,475,746 | 131.199 | 343,557 |
1999 | 13,503,847 | 18,204,584 | 31,708,431 | 1,590,132 | 139.015 | 343,388 |
2000 | 14,159,880 | 18,667,984 | 32,827,864 | 1,691,375 | 127,830 | 345,248 |
2001 | 13,323,529 | 15,989,238 | 29,312,767 | 1,380,280 | 115.153 | 293,448 |
2002 | 14,601,854 | 15,336,334 | 29,938,188 | 1,530,281 | 78.289 | 287,647 |
2003 | 16,436,858 | 15,299,633 | 31,736,491 | 1,578,540 | 76,890 | 280.318 |
2004 | 20,087,733 | 17,486,758 | 37,574,491 | 1,626,989 | 80.502 | 320.074 |
2005 | 22.091.554 | 18,800,357 | 40,891,911 | 1,561,198 | 72.501 | 349,948 |
2006 | 23.003.499 | 19,625,383 | 42,628,882 | 1,548,008 | 90,600 | 378.427 |
2007 | 26.173.691 | 21,544,125 | 47,717,816 | 1,503,530 | 104,529 | 443.754 |
2008 | 25.204.068 | 22,599,048 | 47,803,116 | 1,337,934 | 114,480 | 438.391 |
2009 | 24,021,233 | 21.856.709 | 45,877,942 | 1,054,071 | 95.909 | 415.286 |
2010 | 23,404,277 | 23.116.609 | 46,520,886 | 1,264,430 | 93.094 | 396.970 |
2011 | 23,758,513 | 23,886,084 | 47,644,597 | 1,254,590 | 90.220 | 408.738 |
2012 | 24.217.083 | 25,057,093 | 49.274.176 | 1,196,783 | 84,977 | 401.728 |
2013 | 23.909.175 | 26,542,647 | 50,451,822 | 1,198,424 | 93,251 | 406.098 |
2014 | 25,021,432 | 28.198.994 | 53.220.426 | 1,218,399 | 79,090 | 423,331 |
2015 | 26,806,854 | 30,077,876 | 56,884,730 | 1,208,425 | 79,977 | 439,301 |
2016 | 27,324,138 | 31,779,334 | 59.103.472 | 1,193,273 | 85.411 | 452,407 |
2017 | 26,961,081 | 32,527,901 | 59,488,982 | 1,265,077 | 86,659 | 448,331 |
2018 | 28.117.337 | 33,518,898 | 61.636.235 | 1,290,162 | 84.048 | 455.477 |
2019 | 28,233,791 | 34.317.281 | 62,551,072 | 1,212,471 | 89,533 | 456.060 |
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Incidents
From 1952 to December 2018 there were numerous total write-downs of aircraft at New York-John F. Kennedy Airport (Idlewild until December 1963) and in its vicinity. Examples:
- On 3 August 1954, the pilot of a departed Lockheed L-1049C Super Constellation of Air France ( air vehicle registration number F-BGNA ) on the flight from Paris-Orly Airport and New York City Idlewild because of fog on airport Boston from. However, about 60 kilometers to go, the fuel ran out and a belly landing was performed in a field near Preston City. The machine burned out, but all 37 occupants, 8 crew members and 29 passengers survived.
- On December 18, 1954, a Douglas DC-6 B of the Linee Aeree Italiane (I-LINE) collided with the approach lights during the fourth attempt at approach in the fog , crashed into Jamaica Bay and exploded. Of the 32 people on board, 26 died. The cause of the unstable approach leading to the collision was fatigue of the crew, who had been deployed for around 30 hours on the route from Rome via Milan, Paris, Shannon, Gander and Boston to New York.
- On July 20, 1956 (local time) (according to another source on 20 June) that has been started by the New York-Idlewild Airport crashed Lockheed Super Constellation L-1049E of Aeropostal Alas de Venezuela (YV-C-AMS) due to a wing fire during a fuel Quick indulgence about 65 km southeast of the departure airport in the Atlantic . All 74 inmates were killed.
- On November 10, 1958, came at a Lockheed L-1049D Super Constellation the US Seaboard & Western Airlines (N6503C) during a training flight at the airport New York-Idlewild loss of control, the machine finally with a parked Vickers Viscount 724 of Trans-Canada Airlines (CF-TGL) collided with only two crew members. The trigger was an incorrectly built reverse thrust device that suddenly activated itself. All five crew members and the two in the Viscount survived. Both planes burned out and were total losses.
- On December 16, 1960 a Douglas DC-8-11 of the US American United Air Lines (N8013U) collided during the approach with an L-1049 Lockheed Super Constellation of the US American Trans World Airlines (TWA) (N6907C) . All 128 occupants of both planes and six people on the ground lost their lives (see also New York City plane collision ) .
- On January 19, 1961, a Douglas DC-8-21 of the Aeronaves de México (XA-XAX) with 97 passengers and nine crew members on board had an accident when the take-off from Idlewild Airport (today's John F. Kennedy International Airport) was canceled. The incident was caused by the third, non-flying pilot who operated the thrust levers without prior consultation and thus reduced the power of the four engines . Four crew members died in the accident. At the time of the incident, the weather was bad and the runway was covered in snow. It is also possible that the heating of the pitot tube was not switched on (see also Aeronaves de México flight 401 ) .
- On March 1, 1962, a Boeing 707-123B operated by American Airlines (N7506A) crashed almost vertically into the shallow water of Jamaica Bay about one minute after taking off from New York-Idlewild Airport . The reason was a malfunction of the rudder control, which resulted in a loss of control that could no longer be remedied. All 95 occupants, 8 crew members and 87 passengers were killed (see also American Airlines flight 1 ) .
- On April 7, 1964, a Boeing 707-139 operated by Pan American World Airways (N779PA) rolled over the end of the train after landing at New York's John F. Kennedy Airport and crashed into Jamaica Bay . All 145 people on board survived the accident.
- On February 8, 1965, a Douglas DC-7 B of the US Eastern Air Lines (N849D) crashed on the flight from Boston to Atlanta after a stopover six minutes after take-off near the airport. All 79 passengers and the 5 crew members were killed (see also Eastern Air Lines flight 663 ) .
- On January 26, 1966, the nose landing gear of a Lockheed L-1049G Super Constellation operated by US American Trans World Airlines (TWA) (N7115C) collapsed while taxiing at New York-Idlewild Airport. The machine was damaged beyond repair. All inmates survived.
- On September 8, 1970, a Douglas DC-8-63CF of the US American Trans International Airlines (N4863T) crashed when taking off from John F. Kennedy Airport due to a blocked elevator . All 11 people on board the cargo plane were killed (see also Trans-International Airlines flight 863 ) .
- On June 24, 1975, a Boeing 727-225 of Eastern Air Lines (N8845E) flew into the runway approach lights in difficult weather conditions . At the time, there was severe wind shear . A total of 112 people were killed in the accident, 12 survived. There were 116 passengers and 8 crew members on board the machine (see also Eastern Air Lines flight 66 ) .
- On January 25, 1990, a Boeing 707-321B of the Colombian Avianca (HK-2016) coming from Medellín crashed due to lack of fuel after a missed approach in Cove Neck. Of the 158 occupants, 73 were killed (see also Avianca flight 052 ) .
- On March 12, 1991, a Douglas DC-8-62H of the US Air Transport International (N730PL) had an accident while taking off at John F. Kennedy International Airport. The aircraft was destroyed in the process, but none of the 5 people on board were killed. The cause was incorrectly calculated take-off and trim data by the flight engineer , who had assumed a weight that was 45 tons too low. Therefore, the plane could not take off.
- On July 17, 1996, all 230 occupants died in the explosion of a Boeing 747-131 operated by Trans World Airlines (N93119) . Shortly after take-off from New York, at 8:31 p.m. local time, the almost empty central wing tank of the 747 exploded, tearing the aircraft apart in the middle (see also Trans-World Airlines Flight 800 ) .
- On 12 November 2001 a crashed Airbus A300 of American Airlines (N14053) in the district of Queens, New York City after the start on a scheduled flight to Santo Domingo. There were no survivors among the 260 occupants on board the machine. In addition, 5 other people were killed on the ground (see also American Airlines flight 587 ) .
In culture
- The airport is mentioned in the novel Wiseguy : Idlewild Airport is regularly the site of thefts by Henry Hill and his gang and later the site of Lufthansa robberies (1978); the film Goodfellas , shot on the basis of Wiseguys, also depicts these events.
- The films Final Destination , Final Destination 5 and Catch Me If You Can are set in some scenes at John F. Kennedy International Airport.
See also
- List of the largest commercial airports
- List of commercial airports in North and Central America
- Terminal (film) this film takes place at this airport
Web links
- JFK International Airport website (English)
- Airport website of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (English)
- Website of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y 2019 Airport Traffic Report. (PDF) PANYNJ.gov, accessed on July 4, 2020 (English).
- ↑ Greg Bessoni: Shuttlefare.com JFK Ground Transportation Guide. Greg Bessoni, accessed May 24, 2017 .
- ↑ JFK Airport Bus. JFK-Airport.net, accessed May 24, 2017 .
- ^ Public Transportation. JFKAirport.com, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ^ History of JFK International Airport. PANYNJ.gov, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ↑ Port Authority begins $ 355 million reconstruction of runway at John F. Kennedy International Airport. PANYNJ.gov, April 3, 2019, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ↑ Vital JFK runway reopens, completing rehabilitation and repair on time and ahead of the holiday season. PANYNJ.gov, November 18, 2019, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ↑ Port Authority announces reopening of JFK Airport runway after major modernization. PANYNJ.gov, September 28, 2015, accessed July 20, 2020 .
- ↑ a b c Air Cargo Facilities at John F. Kennedy International Airport. PANYNJ.gov, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ↑ AirportIQ 5010: John F. Kennedy International. GCR1.com, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ↑ a b c d e f g h Airlines. JFKAirport.com, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ a b Airport Maps. JFKAirport.com, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ↑ How New York JFK should change by 2025. aeroTELEGRAPH.com , October 5, 2018, accessed on July 20, 2019 (German).
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l Data & Statistics. PANYNJ.gov, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ↑ New JFK terminal symbolizes airport's rebirth. PANYNJ.gov, May 14, 1998, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ a b 4 Airlines Sign Kennedy Deal For a Terminal. NYTimes.com , July 14, 1994, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ a b Port Authority welcomes first scheduled flight of world's largest passenger plane to John F. Kennedy International Airport. PANYNJ.gov, August 1, 2008, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ Terminal Map. JFKTerminalOne.com, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ Airlines. JFKTerminalOne.com, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ a b c d The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey - Minutes - Thursday, May 22, 2008. PANYNJ.gov, May 22, 2008, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ^ Port Authority approves Delta renovations at JFK. PANYNJ.gov, September 18, 2010, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ New Terminal 4 opens ar JFK Airport - A key element in Port Authority's $ 10.3 billion JFK redevelopment program. PANYNJ.gov, May 24, 2001, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ a b A new terminal for JFK. PANYNJ.gov, September 22, 2008, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ Annual Reports. BlueIR .InvestProductions.com, accessed July 21, 2019 .
- ↑ JetBlue Terminal 5 at JFK. JetBlue .com, accessed July 21, 2019 .
- ↑ Governor Cuomo Announces 75-Year Lease Deal Turning JFK's Historic TWA Flight Center Into Hotel Complex. Press office of the New York State governor, September 24, 2015, accessed March 12, 2016 .
- ↑ New York cult terminal becomes hotel. aeroTELEGRAPH.com , October 18, 2017, accessed on July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ British Airways moves to New York JFK. aeroTELEGRAPH.com , February 6, 2019, accessed on July 20, 2019 (German).
- ↑ The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey - Minutes - Thursday, February 14, 2019. PANYNJ.gov, February 14, 2019, accessed on July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ a b Fact Sheets. News.AA.com , accessed July 21, 2019 .
- ↑ Airlines. PANYNJ.gov, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ a b c d e f 7 of JFK Airport's Demolished Jet Age Terminals in NYC. UntappedCities.com, August 17, 2015, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ End of a jet set icon. Spiegel.de , July 22, 2013, accessed on July 20, 2019 (German).
- ↑ So That's Why They Tore Down the Sundrome: JetBlue's New T5i and Why JFK Now Has Only Six Terminals. Observer.com , June 1, 2012, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ Port Authority Wants to Tear Down IM Pei's JFK Terminal. NBCNewYork.com , June 1, 2010, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ a b JFK Terminal Services & Map. PANYNJ.gov, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ a b JFK Airlines & Terminals. PANYNJ.gov, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ^ Air Cargo at John F. Kennedy International Airport. PANYNJ.gov, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ↑ JFK is building the largest animal terminal. aeroTELEGRAPH.com , January 30, 2015, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ All aboard! Governor Pataki dedicates AirTrain JFK on 100th anniversary of Wright brothers' first flight. PANYNJ.gov, December 17, 2003, accessed July 20, 2019 .
- ↑ The JetBlue focus cities. MediaRoom. JetBlue .com, archived from the original on February 18, 2015 ; accessed on July 21, 2019 (English).
- ↑ Delta Air Lines, The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, and JFK International Air Terminal unveil newest expansion at JFK Airport's Terminal 4. News.Delta.com , January 13, 2015, accessed July 21, 2019 .
- ^ Air Cargo - John F. Kennedy International Airport. PANYNJ.gov, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ↑ a b c Facts & Information. Retrieved June 2, 2019 .
- ^ A b c Monthly Summaries of Airport Activities. PANYNJ.gov, accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ^ New York, NY: John F. Kennedy International (JFK). Transtats.BTS.gov , accessed July 4, 2020 .
- ^ List of accidents at New York-John F. Kennedy International Airport, NY , Aviation Safety Network , accessed December 3, 2018.
- ^ Accident report L-1049C F-BGNA , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on December 22, 2019.
- ↑ Air-Britain Archive: Casualty compendium (English) part 62, September 1996, p. 96/87.
- ^ Accident report DC-6B I-LINE , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on August 22, 2017.
- ↑ ICAO Circular 56-AN / 51
- ↑ accident report L-1049E YV-C-AMS , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on 19 August 2017th
- ↑ accident report L-1049D N6503C , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on 22 December of 2019.
- ↑ Accident report Viscount 700 CF-TGL , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on December 22, 2019.
- ^ ICAO Aircraft Accident Digest 12, Circular 54-AN / 58, Montreal 1963 (English), pp. 314-328.
- ^ Accident report DC-8-11 N8013U , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on May 24, 2017.
- ↑ Aircraft accident data and report Douglas DC-8-21 XA-XAX New York-Idlewild International Airport, NY (IDL) in the Aviation Safety Network , accessed on August 16, 2016.
- ↑ accident report B-707-120B N7506A , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on 7 December 2018th
- ↑ ICAO Aircraft Accident Digest 16 Volume I, Circular 82-AN / 69 (English), pp. 143–149.
- ↑ accident report B 707-100 N779PA , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on January 16 of 2019.
- ↑ accident report DC-7B N849D , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on 24 November 2017th
- ↑ accident report L-1049G N7115C , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on 23 June 2020th
- ↑ accident report DC-8-63 N4863T , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on 11 November 2017th
- ↑ accident report B 727-200 N8845E , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on 24 November 2017th
- ↑ accident report DC-8-62 N730PL , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on September 20 of 2019.