Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport

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Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport


FAA airport diagram

IATA: DTW – ICAO: KDTW – FAA: DTW
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner Wayne County, Michigan
Serves Detroit, Michigan
Location Romulus, Michigan
Elevation AMSL 645 ft / 197 m
Coordinates 42°12′45″N 083°21′12″W / 42.2125, -83.35333
Website www.MetroAirport.com
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
4R/22L 12,003 3,659 Concrete
4L/22R 10,000 3,048 Concrete
3R/21L 10,001 3,048 Concrete
3L/21R 8,501 2,591 Asphalt/Concrete
9L/27R 8,708 2,654 Asphalt/Concrete
9R/27L 8,500 2,591 Concrete
Statistics (2007)
Total passengers 35,966,800
International passengers 3,187,556
Aircraft operations 467,230
Source: Federal Aviation Administration[1]

Statistics from airport press release[2]

Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport (IATA: DTWICAO: KDTW), sometimes called Detroit Metropolitan Airport, Detroit Metro Wayne Airport, Metro Airport, or simply DTW, is a major international airport in Romulus, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit and it is Michigan's busiest airport.

Detroit is a primary worldwide hub of Northwest Airlines, and is also a hub for its Northwest Airlink partners, Mesaba Airlines, Compass Airlines, and Pinnacle Airlines. It is also the second-largest base for Spirit Airlines,[3] which is the second-largest carrier at the airport. Operated by the Wayne County Airport Authority, the airport is one of the nation's most recently expanded and modernized airports, with six major runways, three terminals, 153 in-service gates,[4] and an attached Westin Hotel and conference center. The airport's McNamara Terminal Concourse A is the world's second-longest airport terminal building at 1.6 km[5] (just barely beaten by the 1.7 km long Kansai International Airport). It has maintenance facilities capable of servicing and repairing aircraft as large as the Boeing 747.

In 2007, Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport was the ninth-busiest airport in the United States and the nineteenth busiest airport in the world.[6] Metro Airport also serves the Toledo, Ohio, area, which is located approximately 47 miles (76 km) south of the airport, and the city of Windsor, Ontario in nearby Canada.[7]

Detroit Metro Airport will be the first U.S. airport to see regular service by the new Boeing 787 Dreamliner when it enters service, as Northwest Airlines remains the U.S. launch customer for this new aircraft. Both hub carrier Northwest Airlines and Chinese carrier China Southern Airlines plan to serve the airport with the new aircraft. The airport has access to over 130 destinations in Canada, the USA, Mexico, the Caribbean, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.

In April 2008, Delta Air Lines announced plans to acquire Northwest Airlines to form the world's largest airline.[8] Based upon the two airline's current route networks, Detroit will become the second-largest hub and primary Asian gateway for the newly-combined carrier if the deal closes.[9]

Contents

[edit] History

Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport (DTW)
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport (DTW)

Wayne County authorities began planning for a new airport in the western portions of the county as early as 1927, and the county acquired one square mile of land for an aviation facility, to be called Wayne County Airport, at the corner of Middlebelt and Wick Roads on the northeastern corner of today's airport, the following year. Construction was completed in 1929, and the first official landing took place on February 22, 1930. That same year, Thompson Aeronautical Corporation, a forerunner of American Airlines, inaugurated service from Wayne County. From 1931 until 1945, the airport housed Michigan National Guard operations. The original runway (14/32) was later decommissioned. However, parts of it remain today as Taxiways M-4 and P-4, transversing from southeast of Runway 3R/21L through Runway 9L/27R and ending northwest of Runway 3L/21R.

Between 1947 and 1950, county officials expanded the small airport to become Detroit's primary airport. The airport was renamed Detroit-Wayne Major Airport in 1947 and over the next three years expanded in size threefold as three more runways were built. In 1949, runways 3L/21R and 9L/27R were built and in 1950 runway 4R/22L was built. During this time, most commercial traffic shifted from small Detroit City Airport (now Coleman Young International Airport) northeast of downtown Detroit to the larger Willow Run Airport over twenty miles (32 km) west of the city, and ten miles (16 km) west of Wayne County Airport.

During the early 1950s, Pan-Am and BOAC began operations at Detroit-Wayne Major. 1956 marked a major turning point in the history of the growing airport. American Airlines agreed to shift operations to Detroit-Wayne, doing so two years later, accompanied by four other carriers. Also, the Civil Aviation Administration (now the FAA) announced that year the inclusion of Detroit-Wayne in the first group of American airports to receive new long-range radar equipment, enabling the airport to become the first inland airport in the United States certified for jet aircraft operations. Also in 1958, the L.C. Smith (South) Terminal was completed to accommodate the new carriers, and the airport was renamed to its present name.

During the next decade, the remaining passenger traffic at Willow Run gradually shifted to Metro Airport, and the North Terminal (later renamed the Davey Terminal) opened in 1966 to accommodate the new arrivals. Growing international traffic necessitated the building of a third terminal, the Michael Berry International Terminal, in 1974. The last of its original three parallel runways (3R/21L) was completed in 1976. A new parallel cross winds runway (9R/27L) opened in 1993.

Republic Airlines began hub operations in 1984, and its merger with Northwest Airlines in 1986 expanded the hub greatly. Transpacific operations began in 1987 with non-stop flights to Tokyo. The last of Metro's six runways (4L/22R) was completed in December 2001. The most recent addition to Metro airport, as well as the most significant, was the opening of the mile-long, 122-gate, $1.2 billion McNamara Terminal in the airport's midfield in 2002.[10]

The present Runway 3L/21R has held four different identifier names. When opened in 1949, it was simply Runway 3/21. With the opening of the new west side Runway 3L/21R in 1950, the original 3/21 was renamed 3R/21L. With the opening of the new east side Runway 3R/21L in 1976, it was renamed 3C/21C. With the opening of Runway 4L/22R in December 2001 and the consequent splitting of the field into two sectors (3/21 on the east and 4/22 on the west) Runway 3C/21C was renamed Runway 3L/21R.

Metro Airport has recently been said to be planning a project which would include an airport rail system, a new runway, and terminal expansions. The FAA projects that air traffic will grow 67% at Detroit Metro over the next 20 years, which would equal to 60 million passengers. The rail system would connect the existing McNamara Terminal and the new North Terminal together via tram. It would also connect an anticipated consolidated rental car facility and a planned regional rail system. Also, the airport is considering lengthining Concourses B and C in the McNamara Terminal. In order to pay for these projects, the Airport Authority has asked Congress to raise the current $4.50 passenger facility fee to $7.00. Northwest Airlines, the airport hub carrier, opposes utilizing the passenger facility fee to fund the airport rail system.[11]

The Wayne County Airport Authority has proposed a new parallel runway that would be built by 2027.[12] This runway will add to the airports' already 4 parallel runways and alleviate future congestion.[13]

[edit] Terminals, airlines and destinations

[edit] Michael Berry Terminal

The Berry Terminal, designed by Detroit architect Louis G. Redstone, was the former international terminal at DTW. All international passengers would arrive at this terminal, go through customs and immigrations, and continue on to their connecting flights by bus to adjacent terminals. With four gates, the terminal is now used for scheduled and charter flights. There are still several international scheduled flights on low cost carriers to destinations in the Caribbean and other warm-weathered places. There are also four charter airlines that use this terminal.[14] Upon completion of the new North Terminal, the Berry Terminal will be demolished.[15]

The following scheduled airlines use the Berry Terminal:

  • Spirit Airlines [International Arrivals] (Cancún)
  • USA3000 Airlines (Cancún, Cozumel [begins December 20], Fort Myers, Montego Bay [begins December 22], Puerto Vallarta [seasonal], Punta Cana, St. Petersburg/Clearwater [ends August 16])

The following charter airlines use the Berry Terminal:

[edit] Edward H. McNamara Terminal

The Edward H. McNamara Terminal
The Edward H. McNamara Terminal
Old DTW Airport Layout Showing The Edward H. McNamara Terminal
Old DTW Airport Layout Showing The Edward H. McNamara Terminal
Detroit's colorful Light Tunnel connecting Concourse A with Concourse B/C in the McNamara Terminal. Light patterns along the tunnel are choreographed with music.
Detroit's colorful Light Tunnel connecting Concourse A with Concourse B/C in the McNamara Terminal. Light patterns along the tunnel are choreographed with music.
Edward H. McNamara Terminal
Edward H. McNamara Terminal
The McNamara Terminal's ExpressTram is used to transport passengers from one end of the terminal to the other
The McNamara Terminal's ExpressTram is used to transport passengers from one end of the terminal to the other
The Edward H. McNamara Terminal
The Edward H. McNamara Terminal

The McNamara Terminal, also referred to as The Northwest WorldGateway, opened on February 25, 2002. It was the replacement for the aged Davey Terminal, which principally housed Northwest Airlines, and during development it was known as the Midfield Terminal.

The terminal is mainly used by Northwest Airlines, but houses several other airlines as well, most of which are affiliated with the SkyTeam airline alliance (of which Northwest is a member). It has three concourses, "A", "B", and "C", which house 122 gates with shopping and dining in the center of "A" concourse (known as "the link"), as well as throughout the concourses. The "A" concourse has a people mover, the ExpressTram, that gets passengers from one end of the mile-long (1.6 km) Concourse A to the other, arriving at three different boarding stations, "Terminal Station" (in the center), "North Station" and "South Station", in a little over three minutes.[16] The McNamara Terminal will also open a new baggage sorting facility in October 2008, which will improve screening of baggage through 14 different x-ray machines with bomb detection devices implemented on the conveyor system. Northwest Airlines hopes this will reduce the amount of lost baggage, and improve the timeliness of bags getting to their correct flight.[17]

The "A" concourse holds 64 gates with 12 gates being used for international departures and arrivals processing.[18] The "A" concourse is intended for all but the smaller Northwest aircraft and all international arrivals. The concourse holds over 1.5 miles (2.4 km) of moving walkways. English and Japanese signage is found mostly throughout the terminal (because of regular flights to and from points in Japan), as well as other languages located in central areas. Various dining options for passengers include Starbucks, Chili's, McDonalds, Little Caesars, Burger King, TCBY, and Max & Erma's near gates A31 - A47, Quiznos, Hungry Howie's, and Mrs. Fields near gates A1 - A30, and Edy's, Jose Cuervo's Tequileria, Mediterranean Grill, Taco Bell, Rio Wraps, Caribou Coffee, and Charley's near gates A49 - A78.

The ten international gates have dual jetbridges for a quicker deplaning time. They also contain two exit configurations depending on the arriving flight. Domestic arrivals follow the upper path directly into the terminal while international arrivals proceed downstairs to customs and immigration. The customs and immigration office located in the terminal's lower level is built to quickly process as many as 3,200 passengers an hour. The immigration office leads back up and out into the lobby in the center of the "A" concourse, where passengers can enjoy the restaurants and shops on the concourse, or continue on their journey to their final destination.

The "B" and "C" concourses currently have fifty-eight gates. The gates are used for Northwest's smaller aircraft as well as Continental and Delta flights. All regional flights have jetbridges, eliminating the need for outdoor boarding. Shops and restaurants in Concourses B and C include Einstein Bros. Bagels, A&W, and Fuddruckers.

The following airlines use the McNamara Terminal:

  • Aeroméxico (Mexico City, Monterrey)
  • Air France (Paris-Charles de Gaulle)
  • China Southern Airlines (Beijing) [begins July 2009][19]
  • Continental Airlines (Houston-Intercontinental, Newark)
  • Delta Air Lines (Atlanta, Salt Lake City)
  • KLM (Amsterdam)
  • Lufthansa (Frankfurt)
  • Northwest Airlines (Albany, Amsterdam, Anchorage [seasonal], Atlanta, Baltimore/Washington, Bermuda [seasonal], Boston, Bozeman [seasonal], Buffalo, Calgary [seasonal], Cancún [seasonal], Charlotte, Chicago-Midway [ends June 30; begins August 19], Chicago-O'Hare, Cleveland, Columbus (OH), Cozumel [seasonal], Dallas/Fort Worth, Denver, Düsseldorf, Flint, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers, Frankfurt, Grand Cayman [seasonal], Grand Rapids, Green Bay, Harrisburg, Hartford, Hong Kong, Houston-Intercontinental, Indianapolis, Ixtapa/Zihuatanejo [seasonal], Jackson Hole [seasonal], Jacksonville, Kalamazoo, Kansas City, Lansing, Las Vegas, London-Gatwick, London-Heathrow, Los Angeles, Louisville, Madison, Manchester (NH), Manila, Mazatlan [seasonal], Memphis, Mexico City, Miami, Milwaukee, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Montego Bay, Montréal, Myrtle Beach [seasonal], Nagoya-Centrair, Nashville, Nassau [seasonal], New Orleans [seasonal], New York-JFK, New York-LaGuardia, Newark, Norfolk, Orlando, Osaka-Kansai, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Portland (ME), Portland (OR), Providence, Puerto Vallarta [seasonal], Raleigh/Durham, Rochester (NY), Saginaw, Salt Lake City, Savannah, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, San Juan, Sarasota/Bradenton [seasonal], Seattle/Tacoma, Shanghai-Pudong [non-stop begins March 25],[20] St. Louis, St. Thomas [seasonal], Syracuse, Taipei-Taiwan Taoyuan, Tampa, Traverse City, Tokyo-Narita, Toronto-Pearson, Vancouver [seasonal], Washington-Dulles, Washington-Reagan, West Palm Beach)
    • Northwest Airlink operated by Compass Airlines (Chicago-Midway [begins August 19], Madison, Monterrey, Nashville, Norfolk, Oklahoma City, Pittsburgh, Washington Dulles)
    • Northwest Airlink operated by Mesaba Airlines (Akron/Canton, Allentown, Alpena, Appleton, Austin, Binghamton, Birmingham (AL), Bloomington/Normal, Blountville/Tri-Cities, Champaign/Urbana, Charleston (WV), Charlottesville, Chicago-Midway, Cleveland, Dayton, Elmira, Erie, Escanaba, Flint, Fort Wayne, Grand Rapids, Green Bay, Ithaca, Kalamazoo, Kitchener/Waterloo, Latrobe, London (ON), Marquette, Milwaukee, Muskegon, New Orleans [seasonal], Pellston, Roanoke, Saginaw, Sault Saint Marie, Savannah, South Bend, State College, St. Louis, Toledo, Traverse City, Wausau, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton)
    • Northwest Airlink operated by Pinnacle Airlines (Akron/Canton, Appleton, Asheville, Bangor, Binghamton, Birmingham (AL), Burlington (VT), Cedar Rapids/Iowa City, Charleston (SC), Charleston (WV), Charlottesville, Charlottetown [seasonal], Chattanooga, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, Cleveland, Columbia (SC), Columbus (OH), Dayton, Des Moines, Duluth, Elmira, Erie, Evansville, Fayetteville (AR), Fort Wayne, Grand Rapids, Greensboro, Greenville/Spartanburg, Halifax [seasonal], Harrisburg, Hartford, Huntsville, Indianapolis, Jackson, Kalamazoo, Kansas City, Knoxville, Lansing, Lexington, Lincoln, Little Rock, Moline/Quad Cities, Myrtle Beach [seasonal], Nashville, Newburgh, Norfolk, Oklahoma City, Omaha, Ottawa, Peoria, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Portland (ME), Quebec City, Richmond, Roanoke, Rochester (MN), Shreveport, South Bend, Springfield (MO), St. Louis, Traverse City, Tulsa, Wausau, White Plains, Wichita, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Winnipeg [seasonal])
  • Royal Jordanian (Amman)

[edit] L. C. Smith Terminal

The Smith Terminal, built in 1957, is the oldest of Metro Airport's terminals. The Smith Terminal's thirty-two gates house North American airlines other than Northwest, Delta, and Continental, which currently are located in the McNamara Terminal.[21] All airlines in this terminal will move to the new North Terminal upon its completion in 2008. At that point, the Smith Terminal will be demolished.[22] Additional ticketing counters have been set up off to the side to accommodate more airlines than the original construction of the terminal called for.[23]

Northwest Airlines once operated out of this terminal, and Spirit Airlines, which now operates out of many of the gates once used by Northwest, has done few upgrades to the gate areas in those parts of the terminal. The Northwest Airlines display boards near check-in counters at each gate remain in place, with the Northwest logos removed, and a Spirit information board simply affixed over the old display board.

Dismantling of several of the gates in Concourse C of this terminal has already taken place as the construction site of the new North Terminal is directly adjacent to this terminal.[24]

Various dining options in the Smith terminal include Quiznos, Starbucks, Chili's-to-go, National Coney Island, and Detroit To Go Sandwiches.

The following airlines use the Smith Terminal:

[edit] Cargo Airlines

[edit] James M. Davey Terminal

The Davey Terminal was built in 1966 and was first known as "Terminal 2" or the "North Terminal". It was renamed the "J. M. Davey Terminal" in 1975 in honor of former airport manager James M. Davey. It contained five concourses labeled C, D, E, F, and G, as well as a hotel.[25] Of those, Concourse C was considered the worst by most travellers due to its long distance from the center of the terminal, and its long length. Most of Concourse C is still in use today by Spirit Airlines.

The Davey Terminal was the principal base of operations for Northwest Airlines before the McNamara Terminal opened. It remained vacant for three years before demolition of the terminal began on October 17, 2005. All concourses of the Davey Terminal and adjoining hotel, except Concourse C, were demolished. The thin, odd layout of its five concourses let little light or sun in, and it was dark and dreary most of the time. It was in poor condition when it was demolished, and few people regret it. The further end of Concourse C was also demolished, but the lower part of the concourse is still in use today as part of the Smith Terminal.[26]

The site of the demolished section of the Davey Terminal is being used as the site of the new North Terminal.[27]

[edit] North Terminal

The North Terminal Redevelopment (NTR) Project is a planned 26-gate terminal complex being designed to replace the airport's older Berry and Smith terminals.[28] Construction has been underway since 2005, making the slated opening date September 17, 2008. During that day, all 24 Domestic gates in the terminal will be opened to make room for any airlines flying domestically in the United States. Once all airlines have relocated to the North Terminal, Concourse C of the Smith Terminal will be demolished promptly to make room for a further two international wide-body gates. In Spring 2009, those two international gates and a Federal Inspection Site (FIS) will open to make room for Lufthansa and Royal Jordanian. If need be, the terminal can expand five more gates with the current building. Once all gates have been opened, the McNamara Terminal will exclusively house SkyTeam alliance carriers.

As of May 2008, the North Terminal's name has not yet been finalized as its naming rights have been put up for to bid.[29]

The North Terminal will incorporate two security checkpoints (each with multiple lanes) in a way that will allow smooth operation and screening of passengers.

When complete, the North Terminal will have 26 gates and be considered Concourse D of the airport. It will be used to accommodate non-SkyTeam airlines which are:

The North Terminal will also have a Ground Transportation Center which will be directly across from the terminal near the current "Big Blue Deck" parking structure, which will be expanded a further 604 parking spaces.[30]

[edit] Parking and ground transportation

The McNamara Terminal Parking Structure is an 89-acre (36-hectare) 10-level facility, which opened in February 2002. It is one of the largest parking structures in the world. It includes a ground transportation center, pedestrian bridge, two luggage check-in locations, conveyors and bridges to transport luggage, six restrooms, three offices for parking officials, and two electrical substations. The structure can park 11,489 cars in seven user groups. Parking for the L.C. Smith Terminal (and the North Terminal in the future) is offered in a garage known as the Big Blue Deck.[31]

The airport is accessible from I-94, which is the closest entrance to the Berry and Smith Terminals, and from I-275 via Eureka Road, which is closer to the McNamara Terminal. John D. Dingell Drive (named after John D. Dingell) is an expressway that runs from I-94 to Eureka Road. This expressway was built in 1999 for access to the McNamara Terminal. Many other local roads (including Goddard Road, Northline Road, Ecorse Road, Middlebelt Road, Merriman Road, and Wick Road) all have access to the airport and its surrounding property.[32]

Major rental car companies such as Alamo, Enterprise, and Hertz serve the airport. Taxi and limousine service is provided by local companies.[33]

The Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation (SMART)[34] provides bus routes 125 (Fort Street - Detroit) and 280 (Middlebelt Road), one per hour, that connect the airport with the rest of Metro Detroit. There is a continuous curbside shuttle that connects the Smith and Berry Terminals with the McNamara Terminal.

The McNamara and Smith Terminals also have cell phone lots. The McNamara Terminal cell phone lot is located on the south side of Eureka Road between I-275 and the airport entrance ramp. The L.C. Smith and North Terminal cell phone lot is located near I-94 at the Middlebelt Road exit and the on-airport car rental facilities. Both cell phone lots are clearly marked and unattended vehicles are prohibited.[35]

Metro Airport has also introduced a new system (1>2>3 PARK) which enables travelers to pay by swiping their credit or debit card. This new system is simple because it does not need a parking stub to know the duration of the travelers' stay. As of now, the "Big Blue Deck", the surface parking lots, and the McNamara Terminal parking structure currently have and use this new system.[36]

Michigan Flyer provides bus service between the airport and Ann Arbor, East Lansing and Jackson eight times daily (as of October 2007).[37]

The planned SEMCOG Commuter Rail system, with termini at Ann Arbor and Detroit, would stop at the airport and provide rail transportation to and from the city.

[edit] Awards

  • J.D. Power and Associates ranked Metro Airport #2 in overall customer satisfaction nationwide among large airports in 2007, up from #4 the previous year.[38]
  • Airports Council International (ACI) ranked Metro Airport the #3 best airport in North America along with the Ottawa, Canada airport in 2006. ACI also named Metro Airport the #3 best airport with 25-40 million passengers in 2006.[39]
  • Airports Council International (ACI) ranked Metro Airport the #5 best airport in North America in 2007. ACI also named Metro Airport the #3 best airport with 25-40 million passengers in 2007.[40]

[edit] Various airport names

Besides its official name, Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, the airport is colloquially known by other names:[citation needed]

  • Detroit Metropolitan Airport
  • Detroit Metro Airport
  • Metro Airport
  • Detroit Metropolitan International Airport
  • Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County International Airport
  • DTW (i.e. IATA/FAA Airport Code)
  • Northwest WorldGateway at Detroit
  • Metro

[edit] Accidents

  • On August 16, 1987, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82 operating as Northwest Airlines Flight 255,[41] bound for Phoenix, Arizona, and Santa Ana, California, crashed on take-off from Metro's 8,500-foot (2,600 m)-long Runway 3 Center (Now Runway 3L). All but one passenger on the aircraft were killed; the lone survivor was a young girl, Cecelia Cichan, who lost both of her parents and her brother. The NTSB determined that the accident resulted from flight crew's failure to deploy the aircraft's flaps prior to take-off, resulting in a lack of necessary lift. The aircraft slammed into an overpass bridge on Interstate 94 just northeast of the departure end of the runway.
  • On January 9, 1997, an Embraer EMB 120 Brasilia aircraft operating as Comair Flight 3272 crashed nose down 18 miles (29 km) from the airport while on approach into Detroit. All 26 passengers and 3 crew members were killed. The cause is listed to be the "FAA's failure to establish adequate aircraft certification standards for flight in icing conditions, the FAA's failure to ensure that an FAA/CTA-approved procedure for the accident airplane's deice system operation was implemented by U.S.-based air carriers, and the FAA's failure to require the establishment of adequate minimum airspeeds for icing conditions."[44]

[edit] See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

[edit] References

  1. ^ FAA Airport Master Record for DTW (Form 5010 PDF), effective 2007-12-20
  2. ^ Wayne County Airport Authority (2008-02-11). "Detroit Metro Airport passenger totals for 2007 level off". Press release.
  3. ^ http://www.spiritair.com/FactSheet.aspx
  4. ^ 2006 Financial Report (Wayne County Airport Authority)
  5. ^ Metro Airport's McNamara Terminal Concourse A Is Second-Longest Terminal Building In The World
  6. ^ [http://www.bts.gov/press_releases/2008/bts013_08/html/bts013_08.html Bureau of Transportation Statistics: U.S. Airlines Carry Record 769 Million Passengers in 2007 ]
  7. ^ Directions to Metro Airport from Windsor, Ontario, Canada
  8. ^ http://www.newglobalairline.com
  9. ^ http://www.newglobalairline.com
  10. ^ Metro Airport History
  11. ^ Metro Airport Plans To Expand and Add An Airport Rail System (USA Today: November 12, 2007)
  12. ^ http://www.metroairport.com/programs/DTWMasterPlan/DTWOpenHouseBoardsApril2008.pdf
  13. ^ Detroit Metro Airport Proposes A 7th Runway (USA Today: February 22, 2008)
  14. ^ Berry Terminal Map
  15. ^ Metro Airport's Berry and Smith Terminal's To Be Replaced By New North Terminal
  16. ^ McNamara Terminal Map
  17. ^ Online Version Unavailable (Detroit Free Press)
  18. ^ McNamara Terminal Map
  19. ^ China Southern Airlines To Add Detroit Route in 2009 (Official Press Release: September 27, 2007)
  20. ^ Northwest Airlines To Begin Nonstop Service From Detroit Metro To Shanghai-Pudong Beginning March 25, 2009
  21. ^ Smith Terminal Map
  22. ^ Metro Airport's Berry and Smith Terminal's To Be Replaced By New North Terminal
  23. ^ Metro Airport's Smith Terminal Restaurants, Shops, and Services
  24. ^ North Terminal Project Map
  25. ^ Metro Airport History
  26. ^ Metro Airport History: 2000's
  27. ^ Metro Airport History: Ongoing
  28. ^ Metro Airport's New North Terminal Project Site Plan
  29. ^ Shea, Bill. "Name of Metro Airport’s north terminal for sale", Crain's Detroit Business, 2008-03-24. 
  30. ^ North Terminal Ground Transportation Center Design Renderings
  31. ^ Metro Airport Parking Information
  32. ^ Metro Airport Driving Accessibility
  33. ^ Metro Airport Ground Transportation Information
  34. ^ Smart Bus Routes in Metro Detroit
  35. ^ Metro Airport Cell Phone Lane Information
  36. ^ Metro Airport Unveils New Parking System, 1>2>3 PARK
  37. ^ Michigan Flyer Bus Schedule
  38. ^ Detroit Metro Airport Ranked #2 Overall in Customer Satisfaction by J.D. Power
  39. ^ Detroit Metro Airport Ranked #3 Best Airport by ACI
  40. ^ Detroit Metro Airport Ranked #5 Best Airport by ACI
  41. ^ Northwest Airlines Flight 255 Accident Description
  42. ^ Northwest Airlines Flight 1482 Accident Description
  43. ^ Northwest Airlines Fight 299 Accident Description
  44. ^ Comair Flight 3272 Accident Description

[edit] External links