Source: Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport[3]
Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport (
IATA: ATL,
ICAO: KATL,
FAALID: ATL) is the primary
international airport serving
Atlanta and its
surrounding metropolitan area, in the U.S. state of
Georgia. The airport is located 10 miles (16 km; 8.7 nmi) south of the
Downtown Atlanta district. It is named after former Atlanta mayors
William B. Hartsfield and
Maynard Jackson.[4][5] The airport covers 4,700 acres (1,900 ha) of land and has five parallel runways which are aligned in an east-west direction. There are three runways that are 9,000 feet (2,743 m) long, one runway that is 10,000 feet (3,048 m) long, and the longest runway at ATL measures 12,390 feet (3,776 m) long, which can handle the
Airbus A380.[6][5][7] Since 1998, Hartsfield-Jackson has been the
world's busiest airport by passenger traffic. In 2023, the airport served over 104.6 million passengers, the most of any airport in the world.[8]
Hartsfield–Jackson is the corporate headquarters and primary
hub of
Delta Air Lines. With just over 1,000 flights a day to 225 domestic and international destinations, the Delta hub is the world's largest airline hub[9][10] and is considered the first mega-hub in America.[11] Additionally, Hartsfield–Jackson is also the home of
Delta's Technical Operations Center, which is the airline's primary
maintenance, repair and overhaul arm.[12] Aside from Delta, Hartsfield-Jackson is also a focus city for
low-cost carriersFrontier Airlines and
Southwest Airlines. The airport has international service within North America and to Latin America, Europe, Africa, Middle East and East Asia.[13]
Candler Field/Atlanta Municipal Airport (1925–1961)
Hartsfield–Jackson began with a five-year, rent-free lease on 287 acres (116 ha) that was an abandoned auto racetrack named The Atlanta Speedway. The lease was signed on April 16, 1925, by Mayor
Walter Sims, who committed the city to develop it into an airfield. As part of the agreement, the property was renamed Candler Field after its former owner,
Coca-Cola tycoon and former Atlanta mayor
Asa Candler.[18] The first flight into Candler Field was September 15, 1926, a
Florida Airways mail plane flying from
Jacksonville, Florida. In May 1928, Pitcairn Aviation began service to Atlanta, followed in June 1930 by Delta Air Service. Those two airlines, later known as
Eastern Air Lines and
Delta Air Lines, respectively, would both use Atlanta as their chief
hubs.[19] The airport's
weather station became the official location for Atlanta's weather observations on September 1, 1928, and records by the
National Weather Service.[20]
Atlanta was a busy airport from its inception, and by the end of 1930, it was third behind New York City and Chicago for regular daily flights with sixteen arriving and departing.[21] Candler Field's first
control tower opened March 1939.[22] The March 1939 Official Aviation Guide shows fourteen weekday airline departures: ten Eastern and four Delta.[23]
In October 1940, the U.S. government declared it a
military airfield and the
United States Army Air Forces operated
Atlanta Army Airfield jointly with Candler Field. The Air Force used the airport primarily to service many types of transient combat aircraft. During
World War II, the airport doubled in size and set a record of 1,700 takeoffs and landings in a single day, making it the nation's busiest in terms of flight operation. Atlanta Army Airfield closed after the war.[22]
In 1942, Candler Field was renamed Atlanta Municipal Airport and by 1948, more than one million passengers passed through a war surplus hangar that served as a terminal building.[24] Delta and Eastern had extensive networks from ATL, though Atlanta had no nonstop flights beyond Texas, St. Louis, and Chicago until 1961.
Southern Airways appeared at ATL after the war and had short-haul routes around the Southeast until 1979.
In 1957, Atlanta saw its first jet airliner: a prototype
Sud Aviation Caravelle that was touring the country arrived from
Washington, D.C.[25] The first scheduled turbine airliners were Capital Viscounts in June 1956; the first scheduled jets were Delta DC-8s in September 1959. The first trans-Atlantic flight was a Delta/Pan Am interchange DC-8 to Europe via Washington starting in 1964; the first scheduled international nonstops were Eastern flights to Mexico City and Jamaica in 1971–72. Nonstops to Europe started in 1978 and to Asia in 1992–93.
Atlanta claimed to be the country's busiest airport, with more than two million passengers passing through in 1957 and, between noon and 2p.m. each day, it became the world's busiest airport.[22] (The April 1957 OAG shows 165 weekday departures from Atlanta, including 45 between 12:05 and 2:00 PM and 20 between 2:25 and 4:25 AM.) Chicago Midway had 414-weekday departures, including 48 between 12:00 and 2:00 PM. In 1957, Atlanta was the country's ninth-busiest airline airport by flight count and about the same by passenger count.[26]
Original Jet Terminal (1961–1980)
In late 1957, work began on a new $21 million terminal, which opened on May 3, 1961. Consisting of six pier concourses radiating from a central building,[27] the terminal was the largest in the country and could handle over six million travelers a year; the first year, nine and a half million people passed through.[28] In March 1962, the longest runway (9/27, now 8R) was 7,860 feet (2,400 m); runway3 was 5,505 feet (1,678 m) and runway 15 was 7,220 feet (2,200 m) long.
In 1971, the airport was named William B. Hartsfield Atlanta Airport in honor of Atlanta mayor
William B. Hartsfield after his death. The name change took effect on February 28, which would have been Hartsfield's 81st birthday. The new name would be relatively brief, as it would be changed later in 1971 to William B. Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport with the growth of flights to and from Atlanta outside North America.[4]
Midfield Terminal (1980–present)
To address the significant increase in air traffic that outstripped the capacity of the 1961 terminal, and after years of planning and design, construction began on the present midfield terminal complex in January 1977 under the administration of Mayor
Maynard Jackson. It was billed as the largest construction project in
the South, costing $500 million. The complex was designed by Stevens & Wilkinson,
Smith Hinchman & Grylls, and Minority Airport Architects & Planners.[29] The new complex, initially consisting of the North and South Terminals, Concourses A through D, and the northern half of the present-day Concourse T (which served as the International Terminal), opened on September 21, 1980, on time and under budget.[30] It was designed to accommodate up to 55 million passengers per year and covered 2.5 million square feet (230,000 m2). In December 1984, a 9,000-foot (2,700 m) fourth parallel runway was completed, and another runway was extended to 11,889 feet (3,624 m) the following year.[22] To accommodate increases in international air traffic, a southern extension of Concourse T opened in March 1987, and Concourse E opened in September 1994 in advance of Atlanta hosting the
1996 Summer Olympics, with Concourse T subsequently being converted to use by domestic flights.
MARTA rail service was extended to Hartsfield with the opening of the
Airport station in June 1988 (the station itself was constructed in 1979-80 as part of the airport complex).
In 1999, Hartsfield–Jackson's leadership established the Development Program: "Focus On the Future," involving multiple construction projects to prepare the airport to handle a projected demand of 121 million passengers in 2015. The program was originally budgeted at $5.4 billion over ten years, but the total was revised as of 2007 to over $9 billion.[31]
In May 2001, construction of an over 9,000-foot (2,700 m) fifth runway (10–28) began. It was completed at the cost of $1.28 billion and opened on May 27, 2006.[32] It bridges
Interstate 285 (the Perimeter) on the airport's south side, making Hartsfield–Jackson the nation's only currently active civil airport to have a runway above an interstate (although Runway 17R/35L at
Stapleton International Airport in
Denver, Colorado, crossed
Interstate 70 until that airport closed in 1995). The massive project, which involved putting fill dirt eleven stories high in some places, destroyed some surrounding neighborhoods and dramatically changed the scenery of Flat Rock Cemetery and Hart Cemetery, both on the airport property.[33] It was added to help ease traffic problems caused by landing small- and mid-size aircraft on the runways used by larger planes such as the
Boeing 777, which need longer runways than the smaller planes. With the fifth runway, Hartsfield–Jackson is one of only a few airports that can perform
triple simultaneous landings.[34] The fifth runway was expected to increase the capacity for landings and take-offs by 40%, from an average of 184 flights per hour to 237 flights per hour.[35]
Along with the fifth runway, a new
control tower was built to see the entire runway length. The new control tower is the tallest in the United States, over 398 feet (121 m) tall. The old control tower, at 231 ft, was demolished in August 2006.[36]
On October 20, 2003, the
Atlanta City Council voted to rename Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport to honor former mayor
Maynard Jackson, who died June 23, 2003. The council planned to drop Hartsfield's name from the airport, but public outcry (occurring coincidentally during a debate over the
state's flag) prevented this.[37][38]
In April 2007, an "end-around taxiway" opened, Taxiway Victor. It is expected to save an estimated $26 million to $30 million in fuel each year by allowing airplanes landing on the northernmost runway to taxi to the gate area without preventing other aircraft from taking off. The taxiway drops about 30 feet (9.1 m) from runway elevation to allow takeoffs to continue.[39]
After the
Southeastern U.S. drought of 2007, the airport (the state's eighth-largest water user) changed to reduce water usage. This included adjusting toilets (725 commodes and 338 urinals) and 601 sinks. (The two terminals alone use 917,000 US gal (3,470,000 L; 764,000 imp gal) a day.) It also stopped using firetrucks to spray water over aircraft when the pilot made the last landing before retirement (a
water salute).[40][41] The city of
Macon offered to sell water to the airport through a proposed pipeline.[42]
The airport today employs about 55,300 airline, ground transportation, concessionaire, security, the federal government, the City of Atlanta, and airport tenant employees and is the largest employment center in Georgia. With a payroll of $2.4 billion, the airport has a direct and indirect economic impact of $3.2 billion on the local and regional economy and an annual regional economic impact of more than $19.8 billion.[43]
In December 2015, the airport became the first airport in the world to serve 100 million passengers in a year.[44] The airport is routinely cited as one of the
world's busiest, topping the
Airports Council International rankings in 2022 and 2023.[45]
Eastern was a larger airline than Delta until deregulation in 1978, but Delta was early to adopt the
hub-and-spoke route system, with Atlanta as a hub between the Midwest and Florida, giving it an advantage in the Atlanta market. Eastern ceased operations in 1991 because of labor issues;
American Airlines considered establishing an Atlanta hub around that time but decided Delta was too strong there and instead replaced Eastern's other hub in
Miami. TWA created a small hub at Atlanta in 1992 but abandoned the concept in 1994 leaving Delta with a monopoly hub at Atlanta.[48]
From the 1980s until Eastern's demise in 1991, Delta occupied ConcourseA and part of ConcourseB, Eastern occupied the remainder of ConcourseB and ConcourseC, other domestic airlines used ConcourseD, and ConcourseT was used by international flights.[49][50] By the mid-1990s, Delta's hub grew to occupy all of ConcourseB and the southern half of ConcourseT, and international flights moved to the new ConcourseE.[51]
Japan Airlines was the first Asian carrier to serve Atlanta in 1986. [52]In December 1994, Korean Air became the second Asian carrier to serve the airport.[53]
ValuJet was established in 1993 as low-cost competition for Delta at ATL. However, its safety practices were questioned early, and the airline was grounded after the 1996 crash of
ValuJet Flight 592. It resumed operations in 1997 as
AirTran Airways and was the second-largest airline at ATL until it was acquired by
Southwest in 2011 and absorbed into Southwest on December 28, 2014. Southwest is now the airport's second-largest carrier.
In recent years the airport has had an increase in non-Delta flights, both due to the rapid population growth of
Metro Atlanta and the airport's prominence as a major
hub.
Since 2015 the airport has seen growth from low cost carriers such as
Frontier Airlines and
Spirit Airlines. Spirit also established Atlanta as an operating base.
In addition to the growth of the low cost carriers, international carriers have increasingly offered service to Atlanta since 2014. On May 21, 2014,
Virgin Atlantic began offering direct flights to London and on October 26, 2015, the airline began offering direct flights to Manchester. On May 16,
Turkish Airlines began offering direct flights to
Istanbul and
Qatar Airways began
Doha flights on June 1. On March 3, 2019,
WestJet began offering direct flights to Calgary, and in May 2023, the airline started non-stop service to Vancouver and also started Winnipeg service on September 6. On April 29, 2024, WestJet began non-stop service to Edmonton.
Copa Airlines became the first Latin American carrier to serve the airport in December 2021 with direct flights to Panama City. On June 1, 2022,
Air Canada reintroduced Montreal service.
Ethiopian Airlines started service to Atlanta on May 17, 2023, becoming the first African carrier to serve the airport since
South African Airways ended service in 2006.[54]LATAM Perú started service to Atlanta on October 29, 2023 from Lima.
Aeromexico Connect resumed service to Atlanta on January 8, 2024 with nonstop service to Guadalajara and Monterrey. Nonstop service to Leon/Guanajuato and Mérida began in mid-March. Nonstop service to Querétaro will begin in August.
Scandinavian Airlines started service to Atlanta on June 17 with direct flights from Copenhagen.
Facilities
Terminals
Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport has two terminals and seven concourses with a total of 192 gates.[5] The Domestic Terminal is located on the west side of the airport and the Maynard H. Jackson Jr. International Terminal is on the east side of the airport.[55] The terminals and concourses are connected by the Transportation Mall, a pedestrian tunnel with a series of moving walkways and
The Plane Train, a 24/7 underground automated people mover.[56] All international arrivals are processed in Concourses E and F; Concourse F is the only concourse in the airport that has a gate that can support an
Airbus A380, the largest passenger aircraft in the world. All non-Delta international carriers operate their ATL flights from this terminal, including Delta's partners such as Air France, KLM, Korean Air, Virgin Atlantic, and WestJet. Aeromexico operates in the Concourse E terminal. [57][58][failed verification]
The domestic terminal can be accessed directly from
Interstate 85 SB at exit 72/Camp Creek Pkwy, or from Interstate 85 NB at exit 71/Riverdale Rd. The international terminal is accessed directly from
Interstate 75 SB or NB at exit 239. These freeways in turn connect with the following additional freeways within 10 miles:
Interstate 285,
Interstate 675,
Georgia State Route 166,
Interstate 20.
Hartsfield–Jackson has its own
train station on the city's
rapid transit system,
MARTA, served by the
Red and
Gold lines. The above-ground station is inside the main building, between the north and south domestic terminals on the west end. The Airport station is currently the southernmost station in the MARTA system, though expansions via
metro or
commuter rail further south into
Clayton County have been discussed.[59]
Several local shared-ride shuttle services are readily available at Atlanta Airport, offering diverse options for travelers seeking convenient transportation.[60]
The Hartsfield–Jackson Rental Car Center, which opened December 8, 2009, houses all ten airport rental agencies with capacity for additional companies. The complex features 9,900 parking spaces split between two four-story parking decks that together cover 2.8 million square feet (260,000 m2), a 137,000-square-foot (12,700 m2) customer service center, and a maintenance center featuring 140 gas pumps and 30 wash bays equipped with a water recovery system. An
automated people mover, the
ATL SkyTrain, runs between the rental car center, the Domestic Terminal, and the Gateway Center of the
Georgia International Convention Center,[61] while a four-lane roadway that spans Interstate 85 connects the rental car center with the existing airport road network.[62]
Other facilities
The 990 Toffie Terrace hangar, a part of Hartsfield–Jackson Airport[63] and located within the
City of College Park corporate limits, is owned by the City of Atlanta.[16] The building now houses the
Atlanta Police Department Helicopter Unit.[64][65] It once served as the headquarters of the regional airline
ExpressJet.[66]
Before its merger with ExpressJet,
Atlantic Southeast Airlines was headquartered in the hangar, then named the A-Tech Center.[67] In December 2007, the airline announced it was moving its headquarters into the facility, previously named the "North Hangar." The 203,000-square-foot (18,900 m2) hangar includes 100,000 square feet (9,300 m2) of hangar bays for aircraft maintenance. It has 17 acres (6.9 ha) of adjacent land and 1,400 parking spaces for employees. The airline planned to relocate 100 employees from
Macon to the new headquarters. The Atlanta City Council and
Mayor of AtlantaShirley Franklin approved the new 25-year ASA lease, which also gave the airline new hangar space to work on 15 to 25 aircraft in overnight maintenance; previously, its aircraft were serviced at ConcourseC. The airport property division stated that the hangar was built in the 1960s and renovated in the 1970s.
Eastern Air Lines and
Delta Air Lines had previously occupied the hangar. Delta's lease originally was scheduled to expire in 2010, but the airline returned the lease to the City of Atlanta in 2005 as part of its bankruptcy settlement. The city collected an insurance settlement of almost $900,000 due to the cancellation.[63]
On May 23, 1960,
Delta Air Lines Flight 1903, a
Convair CV-880-22-1 (N8804E), crashed on
takeoff resulting in the loss of all four crew members. This flight was a training flight for two Delta captains who were being type-rated on the 880.[123]
On February 25, 1969, Eastern Air Lines Flight 955 was
hijacked by one passenger shortly after takeoff from ATL en route to Miami. The man pulled a .22 caliber pistol and demanded to be flown to Cuba. He got off the plane in Cuba while the
DC-8 was allowed to fly back to the U.S.[124]
On April 4, 1977,
Southern Airways Flight 242 was on descent to the airport when
hail was ingested into the engines, leading them to fail. Pilot errors and difficult weather forced the pilots to attempt an emergency landing on a highway. Upon touchdown, the aircraft struck several buildings and cars, killing 72 people.
On January 18, 1990, Eastern Air Lines Flight 111, a Boeing 727, overran a
Beechcraft King Air operated by Epps Air Service, based at another Atlanta airport. The King Air had landed and was taxiing when the 727, still at high speed in its landing roll, collided with the aircraft. The larger plane's wing impacted the roof of the smaller. The pilot of the King Air, an Epps charter pilot, was killed, while a passenger survived. No crew or passengers on the Eastern plane were injured.[125]
On November 1, 1998,
AirTran Airways Flight 867, a Boeing 737, lost control and skidded off of the runway while landing, with main landing gear in a drainage ditch and its empennage extending over the taxiway. The nose gear was folded back into the electrical/electronic compartment and turned 90 degrees from its normal, extended position. The cause was an improperly repaired hydraulic line leak that caused the flight crew to lose control of the airplane.[126]
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