Nashville International Airport

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Nashville International Airport

IATA: BNA – ICAO: KBNA
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Metropolitan Nashville Airport Authority
Location Nashville, Tennessee
Elevation AMSL 599 ft / 183 m
Coordinates 36°07′36″N 86°40′55″W / 36.12667, -86.68194
Website www.flynashville.com
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
2L/20R 7,702 2,348 concrete
2C/20C 8,000 2,438 concrete
2R/20L 8,000 2,438 concrete
13/31 11,030 3,362 concrete

Nashville International Airport (IATA: BNAICAO: KBNA) is an airport in southeastern Nashville, Tennessee. The IATA Airport Code BNA is descended from one of the city's early aviation facilities—Berry Field, NAshville, which was the name of the current facility until 1988, when the name was changed to reflect plans for international flights. The airport has four runways.

The airport first opened in 1937 as Berry Field. It was named after Harry S. Berry, the Tennessee administrator for the Works Progress Administration. It spread along 340 acres on Dixie Parkway (now Murfreesboro Road). A much larger terminal opened in 1961 to handle increased air traffic. It was the setting for several scenes in the 1975 Robert Altman film Nashville, and was accessed off Briley Parkway. The current passenger facility on Donelson Pike was opened in 1987, and was designed for a new American Airlines hub. A year later, it was renamed Nashville International Airport/Berry Field to reflect its new status. While it is now very rare to see the "Berry Field" portion used, the airport's IATA code reflects the old name; it is short for Berry Field NAshville.

BNA lost the American Airlines hub in the early 1990s, but now serves as a focus city for Southwest Airlines. It is served by 11 airlines, with an average of 455 daily commercial and air taxi flights. BNA averages a total of 589 commercial, general aviation, air taxi, and military flight operations per day.[1] Direct flights are available to 42 domestic destinations and three international.


Berry Field Air National Guard Base is located at Nashville International Airport. The base is home to the 118th Airlift Wing, as well as the headquarters of the Tennessee Air National Guard.

Contents

[edit] Concourses, airlines, and destinations

Nashville International Airport has four concourses, of which only three are actually in use:

[edit] Concourse A

[edit] Concourse B

[edit] Concourse C

  • American Airlines (Chicago-O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Los Angeles, Miami, New York-LaGuardia)
  • Midwest Airlines
  • Southwest Airlines (Austin, Baltimore/Washington, Birmingham (AL), Chicago-Midway, Cleveland, Columbus (OH), Denver, Detroit, Fort Lauderdale, Hartford, Houston-Hobby, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Norfolk, Oakland, Ontario, Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Providence, Raleigh/Durham, San Antonio, San Diego, Seattle/Tacoma, Tampa)

[edit] Concourse D

This concourse, currently closed by the Metro Nashville Airport Authority (MNAA), was constructed as a ground level commuter terminal for American Eagle. All American Eagle flights operated out of Concourse D until, as a cost cutting measure after 9/11, all American Eagle flights were moved to Concourse C to share gates with American Airlines. For a short period of time, Concourse D was used by Corporate Airlines to operate its own regional flights until it became an American Connection and Continental Connection regional affiliate.[2] Currently, the MNAA has no plans to reopen Concourse D.[citation needed]

[edit] Airline lounges

Nashville International Airport is home to a Delta Air Lines Crown Room Club located adjacent to gate B3. The club offers services and amenities such as:

The American Airlines Admirals Club is located above gate C12. The facility, which was closed after September 11, 2001, reopened on July 11, 2007. The club offers services and amenities such as:

  • Two workstations with high-speed internet access
  • Complimentary T-Mobile HotSpot
  • Complimentary snacks and soft drinks
  • Full-service cash bar

[edit] Cargo facilities

The airport has seen considerable growth in its cargo offerings in recent years with the addition of a 70,000 sq ft (7,000 m²) FedEx Express sorting facility and six flights a week to Taipei, Taiwan by China Airlines and their fleet of 20 Boeing 747-400F freighters. Other daily scheduled cargo carriers are DHL, AirbornExpress, Capital Cargo International, Kitty Hawk Air Cargo, and ATI International Carriers.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

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