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  #581  
Old Posted May 12, 2023, 2:03 PM
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'Continuing to grow': Work to expand San Antonio International Airport could start later this year

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More seating, concessions and gates are on the way to San Antonio International Airport as officials make strides to open a $50 million ground loading facility by early 2025.

Construction on the 37,000-square-foot facility in Terminal A could begin late this year if the City Council approves an agreement with Austin-based contractor Hensel Phelps Construction next week. The contractor has worked on several other airport projects across the country in cities like Tampa, Nashville, San Francisco and San Jose.
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  #582  
Old Posted May 12, 2023, 7:31 PM
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What specific impact will this have on overall airport passenger capacity? That is, how many more people will be able to be processed at SAT when this addition is delivered?
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  #583  
Old Posted May 13, 2023, 3:38 PM
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Originally Posted by ILUVSAT View Post
What specific impact will this have on overall airport passenger capacity? That is, how many more people will be able to be processed at SAT when this addition is delivered?
The airports "high growth" projection by 2040 was stated in their strategic development study as 17.3 million passengers by 2040. In that same study, the airport stated they will need 37 gates to meet that need. This additional 5 ground load gates will give Terminal A 22 gates and the total airport 32 gates prior to the new terminal breaking ground. So just playing with these numbers, I'd say this will give the airport capacity to handle another 2 to 3 million passengers annually.
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  #584  
Old Posted May 19, 2023, 3:10 PM
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Having been a consulting Project Manager on an airport expansion, this project is moving at a very smooth and fast clip so far. I'm impressed that the money and contracts are actually getting out the door in a timely fashion. The only thing not in this article that I am wondering about is the runway extension. Not having that will negate the 3 wide body gates being built on the new terminal, so will be interested to see where that's at in all of this.

San Antonio airport expansion and incentive plans get cleared for takeoff

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Plans to upgrade the San Antonio International Airport taxied closer to reality on Thursday.

City Council passed several ordinances authorizing airport officials to move forward on plans outlined in the $2.5 billion airport strategic development plan.

Improved runways, roadways, parking and the construction of new airport facilities are among the items that will be addressed by the ordinances.

First up among the major improvements at SAT is a new ground load facility. Council members gave the OK for design and construction of a facility at the south end of Terminal A.

Ground load facilities are commonly used at smaller airports and by low-cost carriers to efficiently move people on and off airplanes more quickly and inexpensively, thus reducing airfares.

“This is a greatly needed step in our expansion,” stated Jesus Saenz, director of airports, San Antonio Airport System. “It will bring more flight options for domestic and international travel as we continue to see a high demand for that.”

The ordinance approved by council allows Colorado-based Hensel Phelps Construction Co. to design and build the facility and also relocate an existing gate in the terminal and create additional overnight parking for aircraft.

Hensel Phelps has completed projects at airports in Tampa, Nashville, San Francisco, and San Jose.

The total cost of the SAT ground load facility project is $61.7 million. Another $10 million is budgeted for contingency work on the project related to material testing and environmental mediation.

Funds for the new facility will come from a $20 million grant awarded to the airport under the bipartisan infrastructure law airport terminals program; $31 million from passenger facility charge revenues; $15 million in financing, and $1.7 million from the airport improvement and contingency fund.
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  #585  
Old Posted May 25, 2023, 12:53 PM
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'Ready for it': Memorial Day expected to break records at San Antonio International

San Antonio Express News
Megan Rodriguez
Staff writer
May 24, 2023

San Antonio International Airport expects the busiest Memorial Day weekend travel in its history.

The airport projects there will be almost 187,000 people flying in and out of San Antonio from Thursday through Monday, about 35,000 more travelers than the 2019 record.

“We’re also expecting our busiest summer ever, but right now we’re focused on making sure everyone has a smooth experience in the days ahead,” said Airport Director Jesus Saenz.
Memorial Day weekend travel plummeted to about 21,600 people in 2020 due to the pandemic but has slowly increased each year, surpassing 131,000 in 2021 and 145,000 last year.

https://www.expressnews.com/news/art...t-18116876.php
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  #586  
Old Posted May 25, 2023, 1:10 PM
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Will this be the year San Antonio finally gets a nonstop flight to D.C.?

San Antonio Reort
by Shari Biediger

https://sanantonioreport.org/will-th...flight-to-d-c/

Jenn Hussey’s Washington, D.C., condo, where she often travels for a visit with her elderly parents, is only two miles from the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. But Hussey’s flight path always takes her to Dulles International Airport instead, a 27-mile trip by car or train from the Virginia suburb to her condo. She often makes the same trip from San Antonio for her job as a methadone clinic accreditor and it’s equally inconvenient. “Easily, it’s 45 minutes to an hour and that is like if the traffic gods have aligned,” she said.

For years, federal law has limited how many direct flights go in and out of Reagan National, forcing inbound and outbound San Antonio travelers to choose Dulles or even Baltimore-Washington International Airport. But, in an effort to increase the affordability and efficiency of air travel and strengthen economic growth in the region, a campaign is underway to change the rules as this fall Congress takes up the Federal Aviation Administration Reauthorization bill. It’s an opportunity that comes along only every five years, and though past attempts have failed, officials believe this time could be different for the San Antonio International Airport.

The law limiting flights to airports within a 1,250-mile perimeter of Reagan National, which is owned by the federal government, has been in effect for decades. Houston is inside the perimeter while San Antonio is 1,600 miles from the capital. Through the years, a few exceptions have been made, which include Austin-Bergstrom International Airport. But other major U.S. cities like San Antonio have been shut out by what is an “antiquated rule,” said Brian Walsh, spokesman for Capital Access Alliance, a nationwide coalition of groups pushing Congress to act.

“There are a lot of people who understand that the reason you don’t have a lot of long-distance flight choices out of [Reagan National] is actually a rule that was passed by Congress in the 1960s,” Walsh said. “And it was primarily implemented at the time to protect Dulles airport.” It was a protectionist measure to drive development to the area near the airport, but that area has tripled in size in the last 20 years, he said. “It’s just a much different situation than it is today,” he said. Walsh said the Alliance realizes that Congress likely won’t eliminate the perimeter rule altogether.

“We’re focusing on what’s politically feasible in this environment,” he said. “So we are making the case [to update] it to help meet the demand we’re seeing from states like Texas and Washington State and elsewhere by doubling the amount of flights that go in and out of Reagan each day.”
Three San Antonio business groups, including the San Antonio Chamber of Commerce, have signed on to support the Alliance, along with Greater:SATX.

In its efforts to increase nonstop air service at the San Antonio airport, the economic development nonprofit has targeted European destinations first and D.C. second, said Jenna Saucedo-Herrera, president and CEO of Greater:SATX. “It’s been tough to prioritize that route tactically because of this perimeter rule,” she said. “If and when that goes away, D.C. from a domestic perspective is number one by far.”

Unlocking nonstop air service to Reagan National, also known by its airport code DCA, would be a “game changer” for many reasons, she said, starting with the access needed by San Antonio’s large military and Department of Defense presence, cybersecurity operations and aircraft manufacturing and maintenance sector. “For me, this is more than a potential for upside corporate recruitment investment,” Saucedo-Herrera said. “This is about existing businesses in San Antonio having connectivity with with the capital region and also about potential new investment downstream.”

Greater:SATX is also supporting the City of San Antonio’s attempt to persuade Congress to expand the perimeter rule. Though the city has not joined the Alliance, it is actively lobbying for the cause. “We know this is going to be a heavy lift,” said Sally Basurto, director of the city’s government affairs department, at a recent meeting of the council’s intergovernmental relations committee.

In 2012, Congress authorized only eight new slots for Reagan National, bringing the total to a current 60. Each route is considered a slot, so San Antonio would need at least two to establish incoming and outgoing service.

Then, five years later in 2018, San Antonio had another failed shot at DCA when U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Laredo) offered an amendment to a House bill that would have allowed airlines with nonstop routes into Reagan National to swap out an existing route for one that flies to cities outside the perimeter.

Earlier this month, representatives from Utah and Georgia introduced the Direct Capital Access Act (HR 3185), legislation that would add 28 additional flights, within and beyond the DCA perimeter.

Basurto cited a study commissioned by the Alliance that showed the perimeter rule is outdated and is making travel in and out of DCA more expensive and time-consuming. Expanding the number of long-distance flights could reduce ticket prices by an average $60, the study showed, and generate at least $400 million in economic benefits and $70 million in added tax revenues.

Lawmakers opposed to the change in slots and perimeter rules charge that their out-of-state colleagues are only looking out for themselves. United Airlines, which operates from about 70% of the gates at Dulles, also appears to be against any changes, Walsh said. “We know that there’s going to be great opposition to this national effort, but we do appreciate the attention being brought to it at the national level,” Basurto said.

In April, the city worked to get a letter signed by a bipartisan delegation of Texas congressmen sent to the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee urging them to authorize more direct flights from South Texas to DCA. U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, a Republican whose district includes San Antonio, also testified before the committee. “This is a great milestone that we have accomplished and we will continue to work with them on our future action items and strategy,” Basurto said. Assistant City Manager Jeff Coyle said the city is not partnering with the Alliance because its strategy to eliminate the perimeter rule “may be too heavy of a lift.”

“The second issue is, we’re not married to a particular airline yet, either,” Coyle said. The Alliance is partnering with Delta Air Lines in its efforts. “We may ultimately work with American or Southwest or United — or Delta — and so we’re cautiously talking to and appreciating the work that they’re doing,” he said. San Antonio airport officials are talking with the airlines because demand is high, said Brian Pratte, chief air service and marketing officer for the San Antonio Airport System.

Before the pandemic, about 200 passengers a day flew from SAT to DCA and the same number the opposite direction. About that number also flew to and from Dulles and Baltimore airports, he said. “San Antonio is the second largest market that is not served from DCA and that’s based on existing demand,” he said. “We’re closely behind San Diego. You can imagine both cities being military cities, we’re both very eager to get that.”

Pratte confirmed he has talked with airline partners about DCA service. “Yes, there’s interest in serving the route,” he said. “When airlines are looking at potentially profitable opportunities, they want to put those assets where it will make money and this is certainly one of those opportunities.” Walsh of the Alliance said this go-round is the most nationally organized effort he has seen at getting more Reagan National flights than he has seen in 10 years and that could spell success for San Antonio. “The expectation broadly is that when you consider the demand that exists in Texas, [San Antonio] would be one of the cities that the airlines would look would look at very closely,” Walsh said. But, “this is really going to be won or lost at the grassroots level.”
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  #587  
Old Posted May 25, 2023, 2:07 PM
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San Antonio I believe could easily be served by twice daily service to DCA either on 1 airline or split between 2 (thinking Southwest or American). United would probably scoff a bit bc of its Dulles hub, and Delta I think has little interest in bulking anything up at SAT. Last time I flew out of SAT, it appeared Delta was down to 3 leased gates from 4 a few years ago. Both Southwest and American have added gates at the airport, so capacity for either would not be an issue. I think they'll be happy with even one daily though, hoping for the best this time around!
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  #588  
Old Posted May 26, 2023, 3:06 AM
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Delta has moved most flights to mainline. Sat-lax is twice daily mainline and sat-slc up to 4x some days. Msp, dtw mainline.


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Originally Posted by texboy View Post
San Antonio I believe could easily be served by twice daily service to DCA either on 1 airline or split between 2 (thinking Southwest or American). United would probably scoff a bit bc of its Dulles hub, and Delta I think has little interest in bulking anything up at SAT. Last time I flew out of SAT, it appeared Delta was down to 3 leased gates from 4 a few years ago. Both Southwest and American have added gates at the airport, so capacity for either would not be an issue. I think they'll be happy with even one daily though, hoping for the best this time around!
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  #589  
Old Posted May 26, 2023, 5:34 AM
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Originally Posted by texboy View Post
San Antonio I believe could easily be served by twice daily service to DCA either on 1 airline or split between 2 (thinking Southwest or American). United would probably scoff a bit bc of its Dulles hub, and Delta I think has little interest in bulking anything up at SAT. Last time I flew out of SAT, it appeared Delta was down to 3 leased gates from 4 a few years ago. Both Southwest and American have added gates at the airport, so capacity for either would not be an issue. I think they'll be happy with even one daily though, hoping for the best this time around!

SAT could easily support a daily flight to DCA. If I recall correctly DCA hovers around 200 passengers daily from SAT. Obviously a lot of government traffic on the route. I fly to BWI/IAD pretty regularly and DCA would be a welcomed addition. I think Southwest would be the best option and most likely to fly the route. I have taken their direct route (stay on the same plane) a few times through HOU to get into DCA. The only thing currently holding them back from a nonstop is the perimeter rule.
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  #590  
Old Posted May 26, 2023, 5:49 AM
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Delta has moved most flights to mainline. Sat-lax is twice daily mainline and sat-slc up to 4x some days. Msp, dtw mainline.
They have gone pretty much all mainline which is great. Not to mention the JFK flight just started back up not too long ago. But other than those bright spots they recently lost the number three spot at SAT to United. Southwest and American are way ahead of United/Delta in passenger numbers.
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  #591  
Old Posted May 26, 2023, 2:35 PM
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SAT April 2023 Stats

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San Antonio International Airport (SAT) continues to see passenger numbers rebound from the
COVID-19 pandemic. In April 2023, the airport’s passenger numbers reached 855,404. This
represents an increase of 12% compared to the same month in 2022.
The airport continues to compare its numbers to those in 2019 to better understand its recovery.
2019 was a record year for the airport with more than 10 million passengers flying through the
terminals. During April 2023, the airport saw 99% of April 2019’s passenger levels.
.8% off from 2019 levels... quite literally just over 6,000 passengers shy of record. As mildly disappointing as this is (I'm ready for it to finally surpass 2019 once and for all!!!), I think we can count the airport as having fully recovered from the pandemic. If the trend continues this year, 10M should be no problem for the airport to reach. Memorial Day is supposed to smash records from previous years by a long shot. Lots of credit is being tossed Spirit's way for bringing fares down. Stats for May 2019 are not posted for some reason on the airport's website, but we should be looking for something north of 900k for May and potentially close to 1M (!!!) for June.

Last edited by texboy; May 26, 2023 at 2:57 PM.
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  #592  
Old Posted May 26, 2023, 9:14 PM
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Originally Posted by texboy View Post
SAT April 2023 Stats



.8% off from 2019 levels... quite literally just over 6,000 passengers shy of record. As mildly disappointing as this is (I'm ready for it to finally surpass 2019 once and for all!!!), I think we can count the airport as having fully recovered from the pandemic. If the trend continues this year, 10M should be no problem for the airport to reach. Memorial Day is supposed to smash records from previous years by a long shot. Lots of credit is being tossed Spirit's way for bringing fares down. Stats for May 2019 are not posted for some reason on the airport's website, but we should be looking for something north of 900k for May and potentially close to 1M (!!!) for June.
May 2019 stats
https://flysanantonio.wpengine.com/w...-MAY-Stats.pdf
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  #593  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 4:17 AM
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According the airport’s FB page, 168,848 travelers over Memorial Day weekend which was a new record. 11% bump from 2019

Last edited by Tornado; Jun 1, 2023 at 4:18 AM. Reason: Typo
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  #594  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2023, 9:29 PM
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May 2023 Passenger Stats

Domestic Enplanements: 459,722
Domestic Deplanements: 427,401
Total Domestic Passengers: 887,123

International Enplanements: 22,780
International Deplanements: 22,156

Total International Passengers: 44,936

Total May 2023 Passengers: 932,059

https://flysanantonio.com/wp-content...-May-Stats.pdf
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  #595  
Old Posted Jun 27, 2023, 1:45 PM
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Originally Posted by satx23 View Post
May 2023 Passenger Stats

Domestic Enplanements: 459,722
Domestic Deplanements: 427,401
Total Domestic Passengers: 887,123

International Enplanements: 22,780
International Deplanements: 22,156

Total International Passengers: 44,936

Total May 2023 Passengers: 932,059

https://flysanantonio.com/wp-content...-May-Stats.pdf

Man... fantastic. Before you know it SAT will get its first million passenger month. just 37k passengers off from 2019 totals through May. I flew into SAT for Mothers Day and Fathers Day weekends, and its palpable how much busier the airport is in comparison to last year. The gleaming new terminal and 17 new gates are going to be needed for sure.
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  #596  
Old Posted Jun 27, 2023, 2:03 PM
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There are starting to be more layovers in SAT. There were no direct flights to Cancun from Dallas, but there was one from San Antonio.
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  #597  
Old Posted Jun 27, 2023, 6:14 PM
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There are starting to be more layovers in SAT. There were no direct flights to Cancun from Dallas, but there was one from San Antonio.
Woah, I just checked that and you're right. This might be a dumb realization but I had no clue SAT had layovers. I was always under the impression that was a hub thing.
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  #598  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2023, 12:32 AM
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Airlines scrambling to keep pace as SA airport traffic soars


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San Antonio International Airport is setting new passenger records ahead of what’s expected to be a strong summer.

That heightened demand comes as some airlines have expanded their presence in San Antonio and others are still working to restore pre-pandemic flight capacity to and from the Alamo City.

In May, more than 932,000 passengers flew into or out of San Antonio International’s two terminals. That registers as the busiest May on record at SAT and the first time the passenger count for the month eclipsed 900,000.

The May 2023 tally is up 15% from the same month a year ago. It also topped the May total for 2019, a year in which the airport set an all-time record with more than 10 million passengers.

Local airport officials expect the demand for seats will continue to surge.

“We absolutely continue to work with our airline partners to add capacity at SAT, whether through larger aircraft, additional frequencies or new destinations,” Brian Pratte, chief air services development officer for San Antonio International Airport, told me. “We’ve been very fortunate that the airlines have acknowledged our increased demand and have taken actions to continue their growth at SAT.”

San Antonio International expects its seat capacity will increase by nearly 8% in July over the same month in 2019. More expansion may be necessary.

“Should demand hold constant as it has been, SAT could see over 1 million passengers in a one-month time period for the first time in history,” Pratte said.

Multiple carriers added capacity in May compared to the same month in 2019. That includes Aeromexico, Alaska Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Southwest Airlines, Sun Country Airlines and Volaris.

Spirit, which didn’t begin service in San Antonio until November 2022, recently launched its fifth destination from SAT, Los Angeles. That says a lot about the level of demand, Pratte noted.

But according to new SAT data, capacity among some carriers, including Allegiant Air, American Airlines and Frontier Airlines, is still down from May 2019. The biggest declines were Frontier and Allegiant at 45% and 42%, respectively.

Year to date through May, nearly 4.1 million ticket holders have passed through the gates at San Antonio International Airport. That’s a 16.2% increase over the same five-month span in 2022 and within less than 1% of the 2019 traffic.

As San Antonio advances plans for a $2.5 billion airport expansion, local officials want to be sure passenger demand doesn’t outpace seat supply.

“Airlines continue to be faced with delays related to aircraft deliveries and parts, as well as crew constraints, stifling some of their growth plans,” Pratte said. “We do hope for and expect further growth over the coming months.”

American, for example, has added flights from SAT to Dallas and plans to up capacity to Phoenix as well.

But other markets are also looking to expand their air access.

“This competition isn’t just against other airports in Texas, but across the U.S. and all of North America,” Pratte said.
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  #599  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2023, 1:54 PM
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While all these passenger numbers are interesting from a statistics POV, when will they potentially break ground on the airport expansion?
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  #600  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2023, 2:08 PM
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While all these passenger numbers are interesting from a statistics POV, when will they potentially break ground on the airport expansion?
Mid 2024, should be a good clip through design at this point. I think completion was for 2028 (if I'm being honest, I think they could complete the project sooner than that).
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