San Francisco International Airport | |||
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IATA: SFO – ICAO: KSFO – FAA LID: SFO
SFO
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Summary | |||
Airport type | Public | ||
Owner | San Francisco Airport Commission | ||
Serves | San Francisco | ||
Location | San Mateo County (unincorporated) | ||
Hub for |
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Elevation AMSL | 13 ft / 4 m | ||
Website | |||
Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
ft | m | ||
10L/28R | 11,870 | 3,618 | Asphalt |
10R/28L | 10,602 | 3,231 | Asphalt |
1R/19L | 8,648 | 2,636 | Asphalt |
1L/19R | 7,500 | 2,286 | Asphalt |
Statistics (2009) | |||
Aircraft operations | 379,751 | ||
Passengers | 37,366,287 | ||
[1] and FAA[2] |
San Francisco International Airport (IATA: SFO, ICAO: KSFO, FAA LID: SFO) is a major international airport located 13 miles (21 km) south of downtown San Francisco, California, United States, adjacent to the cities of Millbrae and San Bruno in unincorporated San Mateo County.[3] It is often referred to as SFO. The airport has flights to destinations throughout North America and is a major gateway to Europe, Asia, and Australasia.
It is the largest airport in the San Francisco Bay Area, and is the second busiest airport in the state of California after Los Angeles International Airport. As of 2009, San Francisco International Airport is the tenth busiest in the United States[4] and the twentieth largest airport in the world,[5] in terms of passengers. It is a major hub of United Airlines and is Virgin America's principal base of operations.[6] It is the sole maintenance hub of United Airlines. SFO is also a focus city for Alaska Airlines.
SFO has numerous passenger amenities, including a wide range of food and drink establishments, shopping, baggage storage, public showers, a medical clinic, and assistance for lost or stranded travelers and military personnel. The airport hosts the Louis A. Turpen Aviation Museum, the San Francisco Airport Commission Aviation Library, and both permanent and temporary art exhibitions in several places in the terminals. Free Wi-Fi is available to the public throughout most of the terminal area.[7]
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The airport was first opened on May 7, 1927 [8] on 150 acres (607,000 m2) of cow pasture. The land was leased from prominent local landowner Ogden L. Mills, (who in turn had leased it from his grandfather Darius O. Mills) and was named Mills Field Municipal Airport. It remained Mills Field until 1931, when it was renamed San Francisco Municipal Airport. "Municipal" was replaced by "International" in 1955.
The U.S. Weather Bureau began keeping weather observations at Mills Field in May 1927. The weather records have continued under the National Weather Service, which maintained the Bay Area forecast office in the airport's control tower building until forecasting was moved to Redwood City. Although not the official weather observation site for San Francisco (with the official site existing in Duboce Park), data from SFO's automated weather station often appears as belonging to "San Francisco" in media sources outside of the Bay Area.
United Airlines used the Mills Field airport as well as the Oakland Municipal Airport for its services throughout the 1930s.[9] Domestic flights did not begin en masse, however, until World War II, when Oakland International Airport was taken over by the military and its passenger flights were shifted to San Francisco.[10]
After the war, United Airlines used the Pan Am terminal for its flights to Hawaii. It has grown to become one of five United Airlines hubs and SFO is home of United's largest maintenance facility.
In 1954, the airport's Central Passenger Terminal opened for passenger service.[11] Jet service to SFO began in the late 1950s: United built a large maintenance facility at San Francisco for its new Douglas DC-8s. In July 1959 the first jetway bridge was installed in the United States.
In 1989, an airport master plan and associated Environmental Impact Report was prepared to guide expansion and development over the next two decades.[12] During the economic boom of the 1990s and the dot-com boom, SFO became the sixth busiest international airport in the world. However, since 2001, when the dot-com boom ended, SFO has fallen back out of the top twenty.[5]
SFO has expanded continuously through the decades. Most recently, a new $1 billion international terminal opened in December 2000, replacing Terminal 2 as the international terminal[11]. This new terminal contains a world-class aviation library and museum.[13] SFO’s long-running program of cultural exhibits, now called the San Francisco Airport Museums, won unprecedented accreditation by the American Association of Museums in 1999.[14]
A long-planned extension of the Bay Area Rapid Transit system to the airport opened on June 22, 2003, allowing passengers to board trains directly at the airport's international terminal bound for San Francisco or points in the East Bay.[15] In 2003, the AirTrain shuttle system opened, conveying passengers between terminals, parking lots, the SFO BART station, and the rental car center on small automatic trains.
It is not uncommon for SFO to experience significant delays in adverse weather, when only two of the airport's four runways can be used at a time, due to the separation of only 750 feet between centerlines of the parallel pairs of runways. Airport planners have floated proposals to extend the airport's runways further into San Francisco Bay in order to accommodate the large number of arrivals and departures during low-visibility conditions. In order to expand further into the bay, the airport would be required by law to restore bay land elsewhere in the Bay Area to offset the fill. Such proposals have nevertheless met resistance from environmental groups, fearing damage to the habitat of animals living near the airport and bay water quality.
As such, SFO suffers from loss of service as many airlines, especially low-cost carriers, increasingly shift service to the other two major Bay Area airports at Oakland and San Jose, which continue to expand for the time being. However, SFO has more land connections compared to Oakland and San Jose, being directly connected to U.S. Route 101, Interstate 380, and the BART system.
Recently, recovery at SFO has been evident. Spirit Airlines and Qantas began service to SFO in 2006. United Airlines changed service to Seoul from seasonal to year-round and reinstated non-stop service to Taipei's Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport on June 7, 2007.[16] Nonstop service to Taipei was later discontinued in 2008 and is now flown via Narita International Airport near Tokyo. Also, service to Nagoya's Chūbu Centrair International Airport was also discontinued later that year. In addition, SFO has become the base of operations for start-up airline Virgin America. In March 2007, Air China increased the frequency of the Beijing-San Francisco service from 5 times weekly to daily, with plans to increase to two daily. In 2007, JetBlue Airways[17] and Irish airline Aer Lingus began service, while Southwest Airlines returned after pulling out in May 2001 citing high costs and delays.[18] Aer Lingus ended its service to San Francisco from Dublin on 24 October 2009, due to Aer Lingus financial problems. In May 2008, Jet Airways began service from San Francisco to Mumbai's Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport with a stop at Shanghai Pudong International Airport, but it was later discontinued in January 2009, citing poor load factors.
A global warming study unveiled in February 2007 revealed that much of SFO would be under water with only a one-meter rise in sea levels.[19]
The FAA has issued a warning that the airport's control tower would be unable to withstand a major earthquake and has requested that it be replaced. Construction on the new 216 ft (66 m), US$81 million tower, which will be located between terminals 1 and 2, is planned to begin within two years with completion by 2014.[20]
SFO was one of several US airports which operated the Registered Traveler program from April 2007 until funding ended in June 2009, which had allowed travelers to pass through security checkpoints quickly.[21][22] Baggage and passenger screening is operated by Covenant Aviation Security, a TSA contractor, nicknamed "Team SFO." SFO was the first airport in the United States to integrate in-line baggage screening into its baggage-handling system and has been a model for other airports in the post-9/11 era.[14]
On October 4, 2007, an Airbus A380 jumbo jet made its first visit and test flight to the airport.[23] About 15 months later, on January 14, 2009, an A380, operated by Qantas, made its first regularly scheduled flight to SFO.[24]
On July 14, 2008 SFO was voted Best International Airport in North America for 2008 in the World Airports Survey by Skytrax.[25] The following year on June 9, Skytrax announced SFO as the second Best International Airport in North America in the 2009 World Airports Survey, losing to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.[26]
SFO was one of the first airports to implement a Fly Quiet Program which grades individual air carriers on their performance on noise abatement procedures while flying in and out of SFO. The Jon C. Long Fly Quiet Program is an initiative implemented by the Aircraft Noise Abatement Office to encourage individual airlines to operate as quietly as possible at SFO. The program promotes a participatory approach in complying with the noise abatement procedures.
SFO was also one of the first U.S. airports to conduct a residential sound abatement retrofitting program. Established by the FAA in the early 1980s, this program evaluated the cost effectiveness of reducing interior sound levels for homes in the vicinity of the airport, or more particularly homes within the 65 CNEL noise contour surface. The program made use of a noise computer model to predict improvement in specific residential interiors for a variety of different noise control strategies. This pilot program was conducted for a neighborhood in the city of South San Francisco, and success was achieved in all of the homes analyzed. The construction costs turned out to be modest, and the post-construction interior sound level tests confirmed the model predictions for noise abatement. To date over $153 million has been spent to insulate in excess of 15,000 homes throughout the neighboring cities of Daly City, Pacifica, San Bruno, and South San Francisco.[27]
The airport is composed of four terminals (1, 2, 3, and International) and seven concourses (A through G) arranged in a ring. Terminal 1 (Boarding Areas B and C) and Terminal 3 (Boarding Areas E and F) handle domestic flights (including precleared flights from Canada). The International Terminal (Boarding Areas A and G) handle international flights and some domestic flights. Terminal 2 (Boarding Area D) is undergoing renovations, which will be completed in 2011.
Formerly known as the South Terminal, Terminal 1 consists of Boarding Area B (including gates 20-31, 32-32B, 33-36) and Boarding Area C (gates 40-48). A third boarding area, Rotunda A, was demolished in 2007.
Terminal 2, formerly known as the Central Terminal, was first opened in 1954 and was the main terminal of San Francisco Airport for decades. It consists of Boarding Area D. It replaced Rotunda A as the international terminal in 1983,[28] and, when the current international terminal opened in 2000, Terminal 2 was closed for indefinite renovation and currently serves as a walkway between Terminal 1 and Terminal 3. The control tower and most operations offices are located on the upper levels. On May 12, 2008, a US$383 million renovation project was announced that includes a new control tower, the use of green materials, and a seismic retrofit.[29] Virgin America and American Airlines[30] will share the new 14-gate space, set to open in Spring 2011.[31]
Formerly known as the North Terminal, Terminal 3 is made up of Boarding Area E (gates 60-60A, 61, 62A-B, 63, 64-64A, 65-65A, 66-66A, 67) and Boarding Area F (gates 68-72, 73-73A, 74-75, 76A-76B, 77A-77B, 78A-78B, 79-86, 87-87A, 88-90). This terminal is utilized by Air Canada, American Airlines, and United Airlines, with the final two accounting for 10.2% and 48.9% of SFO's passenger traffic, respectively.
SFO's international terminal was designed by Craig W. Hartman of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill and opened in December 2000 to replace International Departures from Terminal 2. It is the largest international terminal in North America, and is the largest building in the world built on base isolators to protect against earthquakes.[32] Following the theme in other SFO terminals, food service focuses on quick service versions of leading Bay Area restaurants. SFO planners attempted to make the airport a destination in and of itself, not just for travelers that are passing through.[33] The international terminal is a common use facility, with all gates and all ticketing areas shared among the international airlines. All international arrivals and departures are handled here (except flights from cities with customs preclearance). The airport BART station is also located in this terminal, at the garage leading to Boarding Area G. The SFO Medical Clinic is located next to the security screening area of Boarding Area A. All the gates in this terminal have two jetway bridges with the exception of gate A2, which only has one jetway; gates A1, A3, and A11 are capable of accommodating two aircraft. Six gates are specifically designed for the Airbus A380, making SFO one of the first airports in the world with such gates when it was constructed in 2000.[34] For lack of space, the terminal was constructed on top of the airport's main access road at enormous expense, completing the continuous "ring" of terminals. As a consequence, the terminal required its own elaborate set of ramps to connect it with Highway 101. The design and construction of the international terminal is owed to Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, Del Campo & Maru Architects, Michael Willis Associates (main terminal building), Hellmuth, Obata and Kassabaum (Boarding Area G) & Gerson/Overstreet Architects (Boarding Area A).[32] The contracts were awarded after an architectural design competition. If all gates in an airlines' designated international boarding area are full, passengers will board or deplane from the opposite international boarding area.
All SkyTeam, Oneworld and non-aligned international carriers aside from Emirates and EVA Air operate from Boarding Area A (gates A1-A10, A11-A11A, A12). Asiana is the only Star Alliance carrier that uses Boarding Area A.
All international Star Alliance members aside from Air Canada and Asiana use Boarding Area G (gates G91, G92-G92A, G93-G98, G99-G99A, G100, G101-G101A, G102), as well as non-aligned EVA Air and Emirates.
Airlines | Destinations | Boarding Area |
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Aeroméxico | Mexico City | A |
Air Berlin | Düsseldorf [seasonal] | G |
Air Canada | Calgary, Toronto-Pearson, Vancouver Seasonal: Montréal-Trudeau |
E |
Air China | Beijing-Capital | G |
Air France | Paris-Charles de Gaulle | A |
Air New Zealand | Auckland | G |
AirTran Airways | Atlanta, Milwaukee | B |
Alaska Airlines | Anchorage [seasonal], Palm Springs, Puerto Vallarta, San José del Cabo, Seattle/Tacoma | B |
All Nippon Airways | Tokyo-Narita | G |
American Airlines | Boston [ends November 17], Chicago-O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Honolulu, Los Angeles, Miami, New York-JFK | E |
Asiana Airlines | Seoul-Incheon | A |
British Airways | London-Heathrow | A |
Cathay Pacific Airways | Hong Kong | A |
China Airlines | Taipei-Taoyuan | A |
Continental Airlines | Cleveland, Houston-Intercontinental, Newark | B |
Delta Air Lines | Atlanta, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, Detroit, Honolulu, Los Angeles, Memphis, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York-JFK, Salt Lake City | C |
Delta Air Lines | Tokyo-Narita | A |
Delta Connection operated by SkyWest Airlines | Los Angeles, Salt Lake City | C |
Emirates | Dubai | G |
EVA Air | Taipei-Taoyuan | G |
Frontier Airlines | Denver, Milwaukee [seasonal] | C |
Frontier Airlines operated by Republic Airlines | Kansas City | C |
Hawaiian Airlines | Honolulu | C |
Horizon Air | Portland (OR) | B |
Japan Airlines | Tokyo-Haneda [begins October 30][35], Tokyo-Narita [ends October 29] | A |
JetBlue Airways | Austin, Boston, Fort Lauderdale, Long Beach, New York-JFK | A |
KLM | Amsterdam | A |
Korean Air | Seoul-Incheon | A |
LAN Perú | Lima, São Paulo-Guarulhos[36] | A |
Lufthansa | Frankfurt, Munich | G |
Philippine Airlines | Manila | A |
Qantas Airways | Sydney | A |
Singapore Airlines | Hong Kong, Seoul-Incheon, Singapore | G |
Southwest Airlines | Chicago-Midway, Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Orange County, Phoenix, San Diego | B |
Sun Country Airlines | Minneapolis/St. Paul [seasonal] | B |
Swiss International Air Lines | Zürich | G |
TACA | San Salvador | A |
United Airlines | Baltimore, Boston, Chicago-O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Denver, Honolulu, Houston-Intercontinental, Kahului, Kona, Las Vegas, Lihue, Los Angeles, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York-JFK, Newark, Orange County, Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Portland (OR), Reno/Tahoe, St. Louis, San Diego, Seattle/Tacoma, Toronto-Pearson, Vancouver, Washington-Dulles Seasonal: Anchorage |
F, G |
United Airlines | Beijing-Capital, Frankfurt, Hong Kong, London-Heathrow, Mexico City, Osaka-Kansai, Seoul-Incheon, Shanghai-Pudong, Sydney, Tokyo-Narita Seasonal: Cancún, Puerto Vallarta, San José del Cabo |
G |
United Express operated by SkyWest Airlines | Albuquerque, Austin, Bakersfield, Boise, Burbank, Calgary, Chico, Colorado Springs, Crescent City, Dallas/Fort Worth, Edmonton, Eugene, Eureka/Arcata, Fresno, Kansas City, Klamath Falls, Medford, Modesto, Monterey, North Bend, Ontario, Orange County, Palm Springs, Pasco, Phoenix, Portland (OR), Redding, Redmond/Bend, Reno/Tahoe, Sacramento, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Seattle/Tacoma, Spokane, Tucson, Victoria Seasonal: Aspen, Bozeman, Mammoth Lakes [begins December 16], Missoula |
F |
US Airways | Charlotte, Philadelphia, Phoenix | B |
US Airways Express operated by Mesa Airlines | Las Vegas | B |
Virgin America | Boston, Cancún [begins January 19], Dallas/Fort Worth [begins December 6][37], Fort Lauderdale, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, San José del Cabo [begins December 16], New York-JFK, Orlando [begins October 6][38], San Diego, Seattle/Tacoma, Toronto-Pearson, Washington-Dulles | A |
Virgin Atlantic Airways | London-Heathrow | A |
WestJet | Seasonal: Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver | A |
AirTrain is the airport's people-mover system. Fully automated and free of charge, it connects all four terminals, the two international terminal garages, the BART station, and the airport's Rental Car Center.[39]
The San Francisco International Airport (SFO) BART station, located in Parking Garage G of the International Terminal, is the only direct rail link between the airport, the city of San Francisco, and the general Bay Area. As of September 14, 2009, the SFO station is served by the Pittsburg/Bay Point – SFO/Millbrae line.
BART is SFO's connection to Caltrain at the Millbrae Station, which requires a transfer at the San Bruno station during most of BART's weekday operating hours; direct service between SFO and Millbrae is available on weekday evenings, weekends, and holidays.[40] Caltrain used to offer a free shuttle to SFO airport from the Millbrae station[41], but it was replaced by the priced BART service when the BART SFO extension was completed. Alternately, SamTrans buses (see below) also provide connections to various Caltrain stations.
The San Francisco Municipal Railway, San Francisco's transit agency, does not provide service to the airport. However, SamTrans, San Mateo County's transit agency, does, with three lines connecting Terminal 2, Terminal 3, and the International Terminal to San Francisco and the Peninsula down to Palo Alto.[42]
Numerous door-to-door van, airporter, limousine, hotel courtesy, and charter operators service the airport. Taxis, along with the aforementioned services, stop at the center island transportation island on the arrivals/baggage claim level of the airport.
The airport is located on U.S. Route 101, 13 miles (21 km) south of downtown San Francisco. It is near the US 101 interchange with Interstate 380, a short freeway that connects US 101 with Interstate 280.
The airport provides both short-term and long-term parking facilities.
Short term parking is located in the central terminal area and two international terminal garages. Long term parking is located on South Airport Blvd. and San Bruno Ave. and are served by shuttle buses.[43]
Passengers can also park long-term at a select number of BART stations that have parking lots, with a permit purchased online in advance.[44]
Taxis depart from designated taxi zones located at the roadway center islands, on the Arrivals/Baggage Claim Level of all terminals.[45]
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