Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport |
|
---|---|
Characteristics | |
ICAO code | KDCA |
IATA code | DCA |
Coordinates | |
Height above MSL | 5 m (16 ft ) |
Transport links | |
Distance from the city center | 3 miles south of Washington, DC |
Street | I-395 / US 1st |
Local transport |
Subway |
Basic data | |
opening | June 16, 1941 |
operator | Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority |
surface | 348 ha |
Terminals | A; B; C. |
Passengers | 23,464,618 (2018) |
Air freight | 2,336 t (2018) |
Flight movements |
293,827 (2018) |
Runways | |
01/19 | 2094 m × 46 m asphalt |
04/22 | 1497 m × 46 m asphalt |
15/33 | 1586 m × 46 m asphalt |
The Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport is a public airport five kilometers south of downtown Washington, DC in Arlington County , USA . It is the closest commercial airport to Washington. Its original name was Washington National Airport , but it was renamed in 1998 after former President Ronald Reagan . Colloquially it is called "National", "Washington National", "Reagan" or "Reagan National". The IATA airport code is "DCA".
There is an air shuttle service airline to the airports La Guardia in New York City and Logan International Airport in Boston . With a few exceptions, there are only flights to destinations a maximum of 2012 km (1250 mi ) away in order to contain aircraft noise and direct more air traffic to the larger Washington Dulles International Airport , which is further from the center . In 2017, around 23.9 million passengers used the airport. Since he does not have a branch of the customs and immigration authorities , international flights are only allowed to land on the condition that these formalities have already been carried out before departure. Possible departure airports are therefore limited, for example, to Nassau in the Bahamas , Bermuda , Shannon in Ireland , and several airports in Canada .
Transport links
- Washington Metro : The Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Stationis located on an elevated, covered outdoor platform and is connected to the airport concourse level. The trains of the yellow and blue lines hold it.
- Taxi: Taxis from the airport to Virginia use meters ; Taxis in the District of Columbia use the DC Taxicab Commission's zoning system , and there is an interstate surcharge, which means a ride into central Washington costs about $ 10-20.
- Airport Shuttle: Various companies offer a door-to-door service.
- Road: The airport is located on George Washington Memorial Parkway and has connections to US Route 1 through the Airport Viaduct ( State Route 233 ). The Interstate 395 is located north of the airport and is on the GW Parkway and US Route 1 can be achieved.
history
The Washington National Airport was commissioned by the American government in the years 1940-1941 by John McShain on the sandy shore of the Potomac River at Gravelly Point, five kilometers south of Washington DC, built.
In 1746 Captain John Alexander built a mansion called "Abingdon" on this site. His descendant, Philip Alexander, gave the place Alexandria a large part of its area, which is why the place was named after him. The Arbington House was purchased by John Parke Custis in 1778 and was the birthplace of Eleanor "Nelly" Parke Custis , the step-granddaughter of President George Washington . It fell victim to a fire in 1930. In 1998, the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority excavated the site where the mansion once stood and has since shown pieces found there in the exhibition hall in Terminal A.
At the beginning of the 20th century, air travel in the greater Washington DC area was very restricted. Hoover Field , located near the current Pentagon site , was the first major terminal in the area and opened in 1926. However, the only runway of this airport was crossed by a road, so guards had to stop traffic during take-offs and landings.
In the year Hoover Field opened, another private airport, Washington Airport, opened in the vicinity. Both airports had to be merged to form Washington-Hoover Airport in 1930 due to the Great Depression. However, the location of the airport was very disadvantageous due to the US-1 road adjacent to the east and its accompanying high-voltage pylons as well as a high chimney in the approach corridor and a nearby garbage dump.
The National Airport began operations on June 16, 1941. Although now in Virginia, much of the area was once below water in the District of Columbia. A 1945 law made the airport located in the state of Virginia but under the administration of Congress.
Due to strong growth in air traffic, the runway was expanded in 1950 and 1955. The orientation of the runways is limited by the location of the airport. Only the fourth runway, running in an east-west direction, was converted into a taxiway and parking lot after it was closed in 1956. The north terminal, completed in 1958, supplemented the existing terminal building. Both terminals were connected to each other in 1961.
Despite the expansions, some effort has been made to limit the airport's growth. The advent of jet-powered aircraft, as well as the increase in traffic, led Congress to pass the Washington Airport Act in 1950, which opened Dulles Airport in 1962. Due to concerns about aircraft noise, noise control measures were taken even before the introduction of jet engines in 1966. To avoid traffic jams and direct more traffic to alternative airports, the Federal Aviation Administration limited the number of landings in 1969 and introduced flight space restrictions at Ronald Reagan National Airport and four other high-traffic airports.
The airport is connected to the Washington DC metro network. The airport's metro station went into operation in 1977. Originally, the train station was not directly connected to the terminals, but pedestrian bridges now connect it to Terminals B and C.
Renaming of the airport
In 1987, the US government passed control of Dulles and National Airports to the independent Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, newly established by President Ronald Reagan through a corresponding law . Despite this law, the US Congress continued to interfere in the administration of the airports. On February 6, 1998, the name of the airport was renamed from Washington National Airport to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport on the orders of President Bill Clinton to honor former President Reagan on his 87th birthday. This decision was made without consulting local residents.
The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMTATA) initially refused to rename the metro station belonging to the airport, referring to a 1987 agreement that anyone who wants to rename a stop is also responsible for all costs of the changed Signs have to come up. However, the Arlington County, which would have been responsible for paying these costs, refused. The Congress then threatened the transport authority with budget cuts. The Washington Metro then changed the name at its own expense.
Extensions
Due to the expansion of air traffic and due to the limited space in the aging main terminal, the airport began intensive renovation and expansion measures in the 1990s. Hangar 11 at the north end of the airport was converted into an interim terminal for the airlines USAir and Delta Air Lines in 1989 . This freed a number of gates in the main terminal until the new terminal complex opened. This new complex, designed by the Argentine architect Cesar Pelli , consisting of Terminals B and C and two parks, opened on July 27, 1997. Immediately after the opening, the interim terminal was closed and converted back into a hangar. One gate of the main terminal, which had now become Terminal A and was mainly used by American Airlines , was demolished, while the other gates are still used today as Gates 1-9.
Airport security
Since the airport is very close to the buildings of many federal agencies, such as the White House , the Capitol , the Washington Monument and the Pentagon , the operation of the airport was subject to high security measures from the outset.
Before the September 11, 2001 attacks, the most noticeable security measure was the southern approach to the airport. Most of Washington's airspace is closed to an altitude of 18,000 feet. Therefore, approaching pilots from the north must follow the course of the Potomac and make a steep turn just before landing on the southward runway. This landing approach is known as the River Visual and is considered to be one of the most challenging landing approaches in the world. For the same reason, aircraft taking off in a northerly direction have to gain altitude very quickly and make a steep left turn in order to avoid contact with the closed airspace over the Washington Monument, the White House or the Pentagon.
After the attacks, the airport was closed for several weeks and was reopened with extremely tightened security measures. The following measures have been taken:
- Ban on aircraft with more than 156 seats (lifted in April 2002)
- Ban on River Visual landing approaches (was lifted again in April 2002)
- Passengers had to remain seated for 30 minutes before landing and after taking off; if someone did get up, the plane was inevitably rerouted to another airport with a military escort and the person in question was taken into custody and interrogated by officials (was lifted again in July 2005)
- Prohibition of general aviation (was lifted in October 2005 if the regulations below are observed)
On October 18, 2005, the airport was reopened for general aviation. The restrictions consisted, for example, of allowing a maximum of 48 flight movements per day.
The River Visual approach for landing
The River Visual approach is considered to be one of the most interesting approach routes in the United States. It was introduced for safety and noise protection reasons. This Potomac-following approach on runway 19 can only be made when the cloud height is at least 3,500 feet and visibility is at least 4.8 km (3 miles). There is a navigation light on the Arlington Memorial Bridge to assist pilots using this approach . Approaching aircraft can be observed from various parks on the western side of the Potomac. Passengers on the left of the aircraft have a view of the Capitol, Washington Monument, Jefferson Memorial , the National Mall and the White House, while passengers on the right have a view of the CIA Headquarters , the National Cemetery of Arlington, the Pentagon, and the United States Air Force Memorial .
Limitation of the catchment area
The airport is subject to a state-imposed catchment area restriction and, with a few exceptions, does not offer any connections to airports outside a radius of 1250 miles. The US Department of Transportation has issued exemption permits for 24 flight movements per day, which allow certain airlines to offer twelve daily connections to destinations outside the limit. These exceptions are:
- US Airways (8–3x Phoenix , 1 × Las Vegas )
- Alaska Airlines (6–2x Seattle / Tacoma , 1 × Los Angeles )
- Frontier Airlines (6–3x Denver )
- Delta Air Lines (2–1x Salt Lake City )
- United Airlines (2–1x Denver)
In 1999, then-Senator from Arizona , John McCain , suggested that the limit be lifted, causing anger from local residents who feared increased noise from the larger long-haul aircraft. His main argument was to improve the competitive situation, while critics of the proposal accused him of only pursuing the interests of America West Airlines (AWA) based in Phoenix, Arizona . The proposal ultimately failed, but the FAA was allowed to grant further exemptions, which initially benefited not AWA, but its competitor Alaska Airlines. However, in 2004 the AWA also received further exemption permits for non-stop connections to Phoenix.
Terminals, Airlines and Destinations
Terminal A (Gates 1–9)
Terminal A opened in 1941 and expanded in 1955. It was renovated from 2004 to 2014 to restore the original architecture.
-
Air Canada (Toronto)
- Air Canada Express operated by Jazz Air (Montreal, Ottawa)
- Frontier Airlines (Denver)
- Frontier Airlines operated by Republic Airline (Kansas City, Madison, Omaha)
- JetBlue Airways (Boston, Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, San Juan, Tampa)
-
Southwest Airlines (Austin, St. Louis)
- AirTran Airways operated by Southwest Airlines (Atlanta, Ft. Myers, Milwaukee, Orlando)
- Sun Country Airlines (Lansing)
Terminals B and C
Terminals B and C opened in 1997, replacing a number of airline-specific terminals from the 1960s. The terminals were designed by the architect Cesar Pelli and contain 35 gates. Gate 13 does not exist out of superstition .
Terminal B (Gates 10-22 - Gate 1)
- Alaska Airlines (Los Angeles, Seattle / Tacoma, Portland (OR))
-
Delta Air Lines (Atlanta, Detroit, Memphis, Minneapolis / St. Paul, Salt Lake City)
- Delta Connection operated by ExpressJet (Atlanta, Cincinnati, Detroit, Lexington, Minneapolis / St. Paul)
- Delta Connection operated by Pinnacle Airlines (Cincinnati, Detroit, Memphis, New York-JFK)
- Delta Shuttle operated by Shuttle America (New York-LaGuardia)
-
United Airlines (Chicago-O'Hare, Denver, Houston-Intercontinental, San Francisco)
- United Express operated by Chautauqua Airlines (Cleveland)
- United Express operated by ExpressJet (Cleveland, Newark)
- United Express operated by Shuttle America (Chicago-O'Hare)
Terminal B (Gates 23-34 - Gate 2)
-
American Airlines (Chicago-O'Hare, Dallas / Fort Worth, Miami, St. Louis)
- American Eagle (Boston, Nashville, New York-JFK, New York-LaGuardia, Raleigh / Durham)
- Frontier Airlines (Denver)
- United Airlines (Chicago-O'Hare, Denver)
Terminal C (Gates 35-45 - Gate 3)
Traffic figures
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport traffic figures 1941–2018 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
year | Passenger volume | Air freight ( tons ) | Airmail (tons) | Aircraft movements (with military) |
2018 | 23,464,618 | 1,843 | 493 | 293,827 |
2017 | 23.903.248 | 2.162 | 668 | 293,299 |
2016 | 23,600,177 | 1,905 | 68 | 295.158 |
2015 | 23,039,429 | 2,555 | 192 | 292,676 |
2014 | 20.810.387 | 1,783 | 338 | 283.180 |
2013 | 20,415,085 | 1,847 | 56 | 292,656 |
2012 | 19,655,440 | 5,960 | 7th | 288.176 |
2011 | 18,823,094 | 6.261 | 4th | 281,770 |
2010 | 18,118,713 | 6,577 | 3 | 271.097 |
2009 | 17,577,359 | 5,806 | 5 | 272.146 |
2008 | 18,028,287 | 3,307 | 14th | 277.298 |
2007 | 18,679,343 | 2,219 | 296 | 275,433 |
2006 | 18,550,785 | 2,705 | 907 | 276.419 |
2005 | 17,847,884 | 2,593 | 1,376 | 276.056 |
2004 | 15,944,542 | 2,707 | 2,366 | 268,576 |
2003 | 14.223.123 | 3,070 | 2,705 | 250,802 |
2002 | 12,881,601 | 2,726 | 3.137 | 215.691 |
2001 | 13,265,387 | 5,423 | 19,767 | 244.008 |
2000 | 15.888.199 | 7,977 | 29,762 | 297,879 |
1999 | 15.185.348 | 9,966 | 27,773 | 291,765 |
1998 | 15.970.306 | 9,880 | 33,525 | 297.093 |
1997 | 15,907,006 | 11,265 | 36,979 | 304,636 |
1996 | 15,226,500 | 12,591 | 38,426 | 298.086 |
1995 | 15.506.244 | 13,464 | 38,375 | 304,876 |
1994 | 15,700,825 | 14,620 | 43,628 | 306,529 |
1993 | 16,307,808 | 14,788 | 42,684 | 312,346 |
1992 | 15,593,535 | 15.001 | 45,673 | 301,668 |
1991 | 15,098,697 | 14,372 | 45,072 | 292,926 |
1990 | 15,805,496 | 14,746 | 46,485 | 313,740 |
1989 | 15.385.240 | 13,774 | 46,475 | 311.207 |
1988 | 16,014,585 | 16.405 | 47,998 | 322,403 |
1987 | 15,703,410 | 15,689 | 44,294 | 321.182 |
1986 | 14,544,523 | 15,357 | 42,494 | 319.711 |
1985 | 14,690,471 | 19,137 | 46,021 | 306.354 |
1984 | 14,842,922 | 16,933 | 47,250 | 337,538 |
1983 | 14,461,437 | 16,882 | 44,825 | 334.431 |
1982 | 13,321,098 | 17,707 | 45,000 | 307.377 |
1981 | 14,175,058 | 20.183 | 45,735 | 337.132 |
1980 | 14,540,089 | 25,549 | 47,840 | 352.166 |
1979 | 15.134.017 | 34,404 | 44,424 | 352.904 |
1978 | 14,176,233 | 38,595 | 43,403 | 352.044 |
1977 | 13.258.200 | 37,799 | 39,342 | 345,452 |
1976 | 12,336,534 | 37,799 | 37,944 | 326.083 |
1975 | 11,369,061 | 34,714 | 35,062 | 306.494 |
1974 | 11,706,028 | 45,919 | 36,220 | 312.216 |
1973 | 11,715,578 | 51,887 | 38,054 | 339.904 |
1972 | 11,121,965 | 48,955 | 37,304 | 331.429 |
1971 | 10,377,308 | 44,017 | 34,070 | 329,972 |
1970 | 9,768,375 | 45.223 | 31,329 | 319,449 |
1969 | 10,247,537 | 45,568 | 30,038 | 337.084 |
1968 | 9,968,015 | 45,299 | 29,591 | 346.417 |
1967 | 9,383,352 | 44,756 | 25,046 | 334.630 |
1966 | 7,919,955 | 42,570 | 19,852 | 312,494 |
1965 | 6,951,845 | 38,479 | 18,676 | 309,562 |
1964 | 6,188,292 | 30,852 | 15,628 | 289.740 |
1963 | 5,464,010 | 27,669 | 16,854 | 294,797 |
1962 | 4,837,166 | 26,207 | 17.163 | 280.831 |
1961 | 4,646,154 | 22,826 | 17,158 | 290,339 |
1960 | 4,725,605 | 20,963 | 15,338 | 292,146 |
1959 | 5,005,746 | 18,882 | 13,776 | 309.340 |
1958 | 4,533,623 | 17,068 | 12,067 | 280,842 |
1957 | 4,463,227 | 16,049 | 10,958 | 276.717 |
1956 | 3,964,113 | 16,060 | 10,576 | 257,762 |
1955 | 3,634,951 | 14,493 | 10.169 | 225.914 |
1954 | 3,102,875 | 11,067 | 9,337 | 202,573 |
1953 | 2,720,024 | 11,062 | 7,703 | 195,649 |
1952 | 2,492,354 | - | - | 184,460 |
1951 | 2,458,717 | - | - | 186,747 |
1950 | 1,629,723 | - | - | 148,748 |
1949 | 1,386,887 | - | - | 165.033 |
1948 | 1,186,676 | - | - | 160.352 |
1947 | 1,140,945 | - | - | 159,690 |
1946 | 1,230,480 | - | - | 180,690 |
1945 | 756,537 | - | - | 152.067 |
1944 | 557.145 | - | - | 107,315 |
1943 | 360.563 | - | - | 93,086 |
1942 | 459.396 | - | - | 77,348 |
1941 | 344.257 | - | - | 43,060 |
- ↑ Passenger traffic includes general aviation and military
Busiest routes
rank | city | Passengers | airline |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Atlanta , Georgia | 836.890 | American Eagle , Delta , Southwest |
2 | Chicago-O'Hare , Illinois | 794.630 | American / American Eagle, United / United Express |
3 | Boston , Massachusetts | 708.710 | American, JetBlue |
4th | Dallas / Fort Worth , Texas | 444.010 | American |
5 | Orlando , Florida | 436.330 | American, Delta Connection , JetBlue, Southwest |
6th | Miami , Florida | 423.970 | American, Delta Connection |
7th | Charlotte , North Carolina | 339.810 | American / American Eagle |
8th | New York – LaGuardia , New York | 318,640 | American, Delta |
9 | Detroit , Michigan | 291,800 | American Eagle, Delta |
10 | Minneapolis / Saint Paul , Minnesota | 287.720 | American Eagle, Delta / Delta Connection |
Incidents
- On November 1, 1949, a Lockheed P-38 Lightning fighter aircraft belonging to the Bolivian Aviation Authority (NX26927) collided with a Douglas DC-4 operated by Eastern Air Lines (N88727) shortly before Washington / National Airport , which was currently in the final approach curve . All 55 occupants of the DC-4 were killed. At this point in time, the Bolivian pilot had approached without clearance (see also Eastern Air Lines flight 537 ) .
Accident on Air Florida Flight 90
On the afternoon of January 13, 1982, the plane on Air Florida Flight 90 crashed after waiting 49 minutes in extremely cold and snowy weather on the taxiway and taking off with icy and snow-covered wings. The Boeing 737 aircraft did not manage to climb after taking off, so that it collided with the 14th Street bridge about a kilometer past the end of the runway. During the overflight, the machine sheared off the roofs of vehicles stuck on the bridge before breaking through the three centimeters thick ice on the Potomac. The use of the rescue workers was severely hampered by traffic and weather conditions. Only with the help of a few drivers, a helicopter crew from the United States Park Service Police Unit and one of the passengers on the plane, who could no longer be rescued himself and who drowned with the sinking machine, could five survivors of the crash be rescued. The remaining 74 occupants of the aircraft were killed as well as 4 occupants of vehicles on the bridge.
The analysis of the accident shows how a routine that is believed to be safely mastered can become a trap if environmental conditions have changed or unexpected stimuli arise. The first officer read the checklist before take-off and asked about the status of the de-icing system, among many other points. The captain routinely and truthfully replied off . Neither he nor the first officer - both had only made a few starts in their careers outside of the always frost-free Florida - stumbled upon this system state. Although an abnormal start-up process was then indicated and the first officer expressed doubts as to its success, the routine was not broken.
Web links
- Official statistics of the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority (English)
- Official website of the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (english)
- Description of the approach including the River Visual ( Memento from July 14, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
- Photos from the airport
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c History of Reagan National Airport. FlyReagan.com, accessed April 13, 2019 .
- ↑ Airport Overview. FlyReagan.com, accessed April 16, 2017 .
- ↑ a b c d e f g Reagan Air Traffic Statistics. MWAA.com, accessed April 13, 2019 .
- ^ Metrorail station. FlyReagan.com, accessed April 13, 2019 .
- ^ A Roadblock for Reagan. WashingtonPost.com , August 5, 2005, accessed April 13, 2019 .
- ↑ tsa.gov ( Memento of the original from May 22, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ tsa.gov ( Memento of the original from May 22, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ tsa.gov ( Memento of the original from May 22, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Washington, DC: Ronald Reagan Washington National (DCA). Transtats.BTS.gov , accessed April 13, 2019 .
- ↑ Flight Guide. FlyReagan.com, accessed April 13, 2019 .
- ↑ Air-Britain Archive: Casualty compendium part 50 (English), September 1993, p. 81.
- ↑ Accident report DC-4 N88727 , Aviation Safety Network (English), accessed on November 23, 2017.
- ↑ CJG Gersick, JR Hackman, Habitual Routines in Task-Performing Groups , in: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes vol. 47, pp. 65-97