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YVR continues to post some astounding numbers this year, with an average of 7.5% YoY growth for the first quarter of the year. If these rates continue it will skip 18 million entirely and end the year with 19+ million passengers.
http://www.yvr.ca/Libraries/Aviation...2014.sflb.ashx Still a far cry from the mid 90s when it was adding a couple million passengers a year, but it is good to see some solid growth after the slow recovery. |
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The passengers that returned to Halifax did end up being offered vouchers for accomodations on their arrival and ended up getting on a flight to St. John's the next day. As for the damper, I doubt it. We have no service here to the mainland right now and people are chomping at the bit to get on Porter's flights. We have free long term parking for people not from the immediate area. Somewhat related to the contracting out of ticket agents in St. John's: all of the airlines at our airport take advantage of contracted services instead of directly employing ticket agents. It's one of the things the airport initiated when it restructured about 10 years ago. I think 3 women handle all the passengers, calls, bookings, etc... for 3 airlines. |
A nice overview of the new terminal and part of the new parallel runway at YYC:
http://i.imgur.com/9Gu4MaI.jpg |
Not an expansion at all, but Aeroport de Montreal is launching a tender for demolition of the old terminal at Mirabel Airport which has been sitting unused for many years now, and costs too much in maintenance with no prospect of reuse or return in that same terminal
http://ici.radio-canada.ca/regions/M...aeroport.shtml |
Here's a link to the CBC story on Gander's terminal, it includes a couple great views of the International Lounge which is the space that people are most concerned about. As Mr. O'Dea says in the news clip, some have described it as one of the best examples of a modernest space in Canada.
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I think it would be great if the terminal could be incorporated into the aviation museum in Gander. Not sure how that would work but it seems like the most logical option. |
Yeah, I hope they preserve it.
Almost all flights between North America and Europe stopped there to re-fuel and that meant Gander was all most international travelers ever saw of Canada. At first, when it was a little, backwoods airport - Canada started to get a bad reputation. So the federal government built a showpiece for the era - for its time, its probably the grandest in the country - everything in there, from the chairs to the floor tiles to the light fixtures - has a famous designer's name attached. Most of it would auction for a fortune today. It has to be saved. |
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You have to be compensated for mechanical delays, scheduling issues, or anything within the airline's control, but weather constitutes an act of god for which they have no control over and they have no responsibility to customers for what they cannot control. Insurance comes from a 3rd party, not the airline usually, so there is no double dipping (I always go through a travel agent). It's the same as buying insurance on a vehicle or home, you do it to protect yourself against risk. For the sake of $60, buy the insurance. Same thing with your baggage. As per international convention, you are only entitled to $40 for any lost/damaged baggage. If you are checking any bag worth more than $40, insure it, which you can do at check-in most times. Otherwise, if your laptop is in a bag and gets dropped 2 storeys by handlers at Pearson, they can give you $40 and be done with it. |
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Don't want to start another thread but does someone have the top ten busiest airports in Canada based on # of flights? There are a few airports which would make this new top ten.
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This Statscan table might be close (data is for Jan 2014):
1. Toronto/Pearson 2. Vancouver/Intl 3. Calgary/Intl 4. Montreal/Trudeau 5. Edmonton/Intl 6. Calgary/Springbank 7. Ottawa/Macdonald-Cartier 8. Victoria/Intl 9. Winnipeg/James Armstrong Richardson 10. Abbotsford |
Or from wiki for the 2012:
1. Toronto/Pearson 2. Vancouver 3. Calgary/Intl 4. Montreal/Trudeau 5. Ottawa 6. Montreal/Saint-Hubert 7. Boundary Bay 8. Edmonton 9. Toronto/Buttonville 10. Victoria 11. Québec City 12. Calgary/Springbank 13. Winnipeg/Intl 14. Toronto/City Cenre 15. Abbotsford 16. Thunder Bay 17. Waterloo 18. Winnipeg/St. Andrews 19. Saskatoon 20. Pitt Meadows |
Ya I figured Boundary Bay in Vancouver would show up on the busiest by flights list. The planes are small so wouldn't show in the passenger top 10.
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YYC passenger traffic increased by 7.8% over the first quarter of this year.
Over the first 3 months of last year, they recorded 3 334 437 passengers... this year, we've seen an increase of around 260 000, to 3 594 410 :) If this trend continues, we will jump to about 15.3 million (an increase of around 1 million) passengers this year, since Q3 and Q4 are always significantly busier than Q1. |
Wtf is wrong with Winnipeg? The city is growing but the airport traffic isn't. I don't understand.
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It's the same with Ottawa, the city is growing at a healthy clip, but air traffic is decreasing. I believe in Ottawa it is because of the feds cutting back jobs... could a major player in Winnipeg be cutting a lot of jobs, and therefor, a lot of corporate/government travel?
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I don't think so. The economy and the job market are pretty healthy actually.
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Winnipeg is notorious for travelers deciding to hop across the US border to catch cheaper flights out of North Dakota or Minnesota from places like Grand Forks. I don't know exactly how extensive the problem is from a purely quantative standpoint (the news may be exaggerating somewhat), but i'm sure it adds up to alot of lost revenue for airlines operating out of Winnipeg International.
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