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  #541  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 7:17 PM
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Edmonton is on pace to be at 7,000,000 this year or damn near.
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  #542  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 7:20 PM
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I'm impressed by the Edmonton airport control tower. It still looks as if it were a rendering.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wishblade View Post
Here are the 2012 numbers:

Toronto 34,912,456
Vancouver 17,596,901
Montreal 13,809,820
Calgary 13,638,137
Edmonton 6,676,445
Ottawa 4,685,956
Halifax 3,605,701
Winnipeg 3,538,175
Victoria 1,506,578
St. John's 1,450,000
Kelowna 1,440,952
Quebec City 1,342,840
Saskatoon 1,326,838
Regina 1,185,715
I think it's a remarkable demonstration of the nation's shifting centre of gravity that Alberta's airports now move 20,314,582 people annually. Add Vancouver, Kelowna, and Victoria and the two western-most provinces' large airports are moving 40,859,013 people annually. Add Winnipeg, Regina, and Saskatoon, and the western provinces' large airports move 46,909,741 annually; 45% of the total moved by the 14 large airports on that list.
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  #543  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 7:24 PM
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Whenever Edmonton's passenger numbers grow it seems like Calgary's do too. The west is booming.

YYC is on track right now to easily break 14 million this year and overtake YUL as the 3rd busiest airport in the country.

http://www.yyc.com/en-us/media/factsfigures/passengerstatistics.aspx
     
     
  #544  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 7:31 PM
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Can anyone explain what these letters mean; YOW, YYZ, YUL?
     
     
  #545  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 7:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Coldrsx View Post
Western Hub
Actually it is not. A focus city yes, but a hub - no way. Vancouver is more of a hub than YYC is. Calgary hits way above its weight because of the energy industry and the traffic that generates (both business and leisure).
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  #546  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 7:42 PM
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Good to see that at half the population, Vancouver has half the passengers than Toronto. Considering Toronto is the home of AC and the largest airport in the country, and Vancouver has no home airline its doing quite well.
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  #547  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 7:55 PM
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Vancouver lead the way with downtown-airport rail link when they built the Canada line for the 2010 Olympics and Toronto is finally building a long overdue link to Pearson International but are their any other cities taking a serious look into a Downtown-Airport link?

Going through the thread I saw MTLskyline's May 2010 post about Pierre Trudeau International's underground rail station progress and different possibilities (ATM or STM) but I have yet to hear any update on this.
     
     
  #548  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 7:59 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
Can anyone explain what these letters mean; YOW, YYZ, YUL?
Codes for Ottawa, Toronto (Pearson) and Montreal (Trudeau) airports, respectively.

Discussions about airports and aviation typically use IATA airport codes... you can find a complete list here: http://www.prokerala.com/travel/airports/canada/
     
     
  #549  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 8:00 PM
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They're just airport codes. For some reason, Canada didn't get their city names as acronyms for their airport codes like American cities, but most Canadian cities have at least the first letter of the city name in their code, like YVR for Vancouver, YYC for Calgary, and YEG for Edmonton, among others.
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  #550  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 8:04 PM
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Thanks. Still don't get the point though.
     
     
  #551  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 8:08 PM
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Idenification purposes, because many cities have the same or similar names.
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Mohkínstsis — 1.6 million people at the Foothills of the Rocky Mountains, 400 high-rises, a 300-metre SE to NW climb, over 1000 kilometres of pathways, with 20% of the urban area as parkland.
     
     
  #552  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 8:13 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chadillaccc View Post
Idenification purposes, because many cities have the same or similar names.
Fair enough.
     
     
  #553  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 8:52 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lubicon View Post
Actually it is not. A focus city yes, but a hub - no way. Vancouver is more of a hub than YYC is. Calgary hits way above its weight because of the energy industry and the traffic that generates (both business and leisure).
You should probably tell Air Canada that, because some rube in marketing has been happily marking Calgary down as a hub. What an embarrassment; they should know better!
     
     
  #554  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 8:54 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chadillaccc View Post
Idenification purposes, because many cities have the same or similar names.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Springfield <-- 7 countries' worth of Springfields
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portland <-- 9 countries' worth of Portlands
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_most_common_U.S._place_names <-- most common city names in US
Etc.
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  #555  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 9:05 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Denscity View Post
Good to see that at half the population, Vancouver has half the passengers than Toronto. Considering Toronto is the home of AC and the largest airport in the country, and Vancouver has no home airline its doing quite well.
Montreal is the home of Air Canada. Toronto is just our largest airport and naturally where Air Canada's largest operations are.
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  #556  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 9:17 PM
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Originally Posted by Calgarian View Post
Either Calgary is hitting way above it's weight or Montreal is hitting way below, seems crazy to me that Calgary has virtually the same number of passengers as a city nearly 4x the size. Is there competition in the eastern part of the country aside from Toronto?
It's a combination of Calgary hitting above its weight and Montreal hitting below. Interesting to note that Melbourne is the same size as Montreal, but has almost double the traffic. Air travel is far more expensive in Canada so travelers drive, take the bus, or train when possible. Montreal is also a fairly poor city by north American standards. People don't hop on planes like they do in Melbourne, Boston, etc. High prices caused by Ottawa taxation policies just exacerbate the problem. For the sake of comparison:

1. SYD Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport - 36,927,417 passengers. (Toronto is a far more populous city in a far more populous region)
2. MEL Melbourne Airport - 29,297,357 passengers. (Montreal is the same size, but in a more populous region)
3. BNE Brisbane Airport - 21,017,060 passengers. (Vancouver is the same size, but in a more populous region)

Competition for Toronto in the east? I think Halifax takes a tiny bit of trans-Atlantic traffic away from Toronto, but not much. Halifax benefits from geography, but its potential as a north American hub has never been realized. For instance, it could be used instead of Boston or New York for flights that continue on to points in the US heartland, but I doubt they get much of that business.
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Last edited by isaidso; Aug 29, 2013 at 9:29 PM.
     
     
  #557  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 9:22 PM
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I'd argue that YYC is in fact a "Hub"...but I'd put label it as more of a Domestic/Transborder Hub.
     
     
  #558  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 9:32 PM
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^^ Calgary is definitely a hub and AC is developing it as one.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wishblade View Post
Here are the 2012 numbers:

Toronto 34,912,456
Vancouver 17,596,901
Montreal 13,809,820
Calgary 13,638,137
Edmonton 6,676,445
Ottawa 4,685,956
Halifax 3,605,701
Winnipeg 3,538,175
Victoria 1,506,578
St. John's 1,450,000
Kelowna 1,440,952
Quebec City 1,342,840
Saskatoon 1,326,838
Regina 1,185,715
Billy Bishop (Toronto Island Airport) is missing from the list and should be in 9th spot behind Winnipeg. Wikipedia lists it at around 2,000,000. Sounds like an estimate, but roughly right.

01. Toronto (Pearson) 34,912,456
02. Vancouver 17,596,901
03. Montreal (Trudeau) 13,809,820
04. Calgary 13,638,137
05. Edmonton 6,676,445

06. Ottawa (Cartier) 4,685,956
07. Halifax (Stanfield) 3,605,701
08. Winnipeg (Richardson) 3,538,175
09. Toronto (Billy Bishop) 2,000,000*
10. Victoria 1,506,578

11. St. John's 1,450,000
12. Kelowna 1,440,952
13. Quebec City (Lesage) 1,342,840
14. Saskatoon (Diefenbaker) 1,326,838
15. Regina 1,185,715


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_busiest_airports_in_Canada
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Last edited by isaidso; Aug 29, 2013 at 9:50 PM.
     
     
  #559  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 9:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lubicon View Post
Actually it is not. A focus city yes, but a hub - no way. Vancouver is more of a hub than YYC is. Calgary hits way above its weight because of the energy industry and the traffic that generates (both business and leisure).
Not a chance. If that was the case Edmonton's numbers would be a lot closer to Calgary's (or vice versa)

Calgary is a hub for Air Canada, and obviously the focus airport for Westjet.

IMO those are the reason the numbers get inflated.
     
     
  #560  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2013, 9:58 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by isaidso View Post
It's a combination of Calgary hitting above its weight and Montreal hitting below. Interesting to note that Melbourne is the same size as Montreal, but has almost double the traffic. Air travel is far more expensive in Canada so travelers drive, take the bus, or train when possible. Montreal is also a fairly poor city by north American standards. People don't hop on planes like they do in Melbourne, Boston, etc. High prices caused by Ottawa taxation policies just exacerbate the problem. For the sake of comparison:

1. SYD Sydney (Kingsford Smith) Airport - 36,927,417 passengers. (Toronto is a far more populous city in a far more populous region)
2. MEL Melbourne Airport - 29,297,357 passengers. (Montreal is the same size, but in a more populous region)
3. BNE Brisbane Airport - 21,017,060 passengers. (Vancouver is the same size, but in a more populous region)

Competition for Toronto in the east? I think Halifax takes a tiny bit of trans-Atlantic traffic away from Toronto, but not much. Halifax benefits from geography, but its potential as a north American hub has never been realized. For instance, it could be used instead of Boston or New York for flights that continue on to points in the US heartland, but I doubt they get much of that business.
I think Australia might have bigger numbers due to the fact that they are an isolated island. Comparing two similar sized cities in North America Toronto Pearson's numbers (34,912,456) are in line with Boston's Logan (29,325,617). Same with Vancouver (17,596,901) and Portland (14,390,784).

Last edited by J.OT13; Aug 29, 2013 at 10:08 PM.
     
     
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