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Originally Posted by GoldenBoot
There is very little reason for a second commercial airport in the Austin metro area. Maybe when the met's population approaches 5 or 6 million. But, that is decades away.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GoldenBoot
Yes. I know. Provo-Orem-Lehi. It is also a component of the Greater Salt Lake City CSA ("Salt Lake-Provo-Orem" - home to just over 2.8 million).
The locations I listed were right on the outskirts of a 50-mile circle radiating from downtown Austin. As the crow flies, GRK is roughly 56 miles from CBD Austin.
Bottom line point - Austin does need another commercial airport!
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Does or does not?
I would argue that GRK is well positioned to capitalize on the regional growth. As we both mention, it is within a reasonable commute difference and becoming moreso with better infrastructure connections and the growth of the northern suburbs. Airports are not dime a dozen infrastructure and new airports should only be pursued when we max out the build-out capacity of the existing ABIA land area. Not only is that bad land-use policy (airports are HUGE expanses of land, and they generally are surrounded by significant amounts of industrial land none of which are suitable as good neighbors to residential areas. To the degree possible, any and all additions to air infrastructure capacity should be kept on the existing footprint. If/when they cannot, eminent domain of adjacent parcels should be pursued first and foremost before any new airports somewhere else are built from scratch. San Antonio had this relocation battle before settling on an expansion and renovation plan of their existing facilities, which is the smart choice.
Also: San Marcos is perhaps the better bet for cargo expansion, being centrally located between Austin and San Antonio. IIRC, isn’t there some push for that?
These four airports (SAT, ABIA, GRK, and HYI) plus the handful of smaller facilities, including Austin Executive) when considering expansion potential are enough for the entire region even if we ever approach 10 million people. We don’t need to waste more land on this infrastructure for some major new cohesive regional intercontinental airport until Austin and San Antonio are without a doubt a single urban entity anchoring a broader region of 15+ million.