Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport

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Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport
IATA: ITH - ICAO: KITH
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Tompkins County
Serves Ithaca, New York
Elevation AMSL 1,099 ft (335 m)
Coordinates 42°29′28″N, 076°27′30″W
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
14/32 6,601 2,012 Asphalt
15/33 2,018 615 Turf
FAA diagram of Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport (ITH)
FAA diagram of Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport (ITH)

Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport (IATA: ITHICAO: KITH) is a small regional airport that serves the southern Finger Lakes Region of New York. It is located about 4 miles (5 km) northeast of the city of Ithaca, the county seat and largest city in Tompkins County, near New York State Route 13. It is used for private as well as commercial passenger and freight aviation.

For over 50 years, the airport has been home to the East Hill Flying Club, which offers lessons and the use of six small planes to its members. It is also the home of Taughannock Aviation, which provides business jet charter and management as well as being the fixed base operator for the airport.

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[edit] History

The original Ithaca Municipal Airport was located west of downtown Ithaca, near the inlet of Cayuga Lake. Its unpaved runways, proximity to the city, and fog in the lake valley posed serious limits to growth, however. Cornell University opened the existing airport on East Hill in 1948 and transferred its ownership to the County in 1956. The former airport site is now Cass Park, including a hangar which was renovated in 1975 to house the Hangar Theatre.

In 1994 the runway was extended from 5801 feet in length to its present 6601 feet and an entirely new, 33,000 square foot (3,000 m²) terminal building opened, replacing the cramped, aging original building. The airport received its current name on March 20, 2001. The northwest-facing runway 32 is equipped with an instrument landing system approach and an associated medium intensity approach light system with runway alignment lights. Runway 14, facing southeast, has an instrument approach based on the VOR/DME located at the airport. A short turf runway was commissioned parallel to the paved runway, but during the 1980s another turf runway oriented north-south was available to the west of the terminal building and was approximately 1802 feet long and 100 feet wide.

The airport was the base where aviation pioneer Cecil Robinson began flying aerial photography missions. In 1945 shortly after the end of World War II, he created Robinson Airlines, basing its maintenance operations at the airport. The airline changed its name to Mohawk Airlines in 1952 and merged with Allegheny Airlines in 1972. Later the airport was also served by Empire Airlines and Air North, the of latter which became Brockway Air, which was merged into Piedmont Airlines. Allegheny, Piedmont, and Empire were all eventually merged into US Airways.

Other carriers that served the airport include Commuter Airlines, Mall Airways, Command Airways (later dba American Eagle), TW Express (also dba United Express), and Continental Express.

Commercial traffic peaked in 1990 with some 226,813 passengers, but has since declined; it served about 140,000 passengers in 2004 [1]. During this time the small size of the market, relative proximity to Syracuse Hancock International Airport and other regional airports, and crowded conditions in Northeastern airspace had led Trans World Airlines, United Airlines, and finally Continental Airlines to seek more profitable routes, leaving US Airways the sole carrier.

In late 2004, after negotiations with the County, Northwest Airlines agreed to add Northwest Airlink service to Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, which began on May 2, 2005. US Airways nonstop service to Pittsburgh, where it maintains focus city operations, resumed on November 9, 2005 but ceased again on April 1, 2006 due to low yield.

[edit] Airlines and destinations

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    [edit] External links

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