Los Angeles Times

Renovation­s at LAX move a step closer

L.A. City Council overrides concerns raised by nearby El Segundo about impact on its residents.

- By Emily Alpert Reyes

L.A. officials vote to back a plan to renovate two terminals that will nearly double their size.

Los Angeles lawmakers voted Friday to back the planned overhaul of two terminals at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport, overriding concerns from the nearby city of El Segundo.

Airport officials plan to tear down and rebuild parts of terminals 2 and 3 to ease crowding at security checkpoint­s, make it easier for passengers to get to their gates, and give aging areas of the terminals a makeover.

The renovation­s will nearly double the size of the two terminals to more than 1.6 million square feet.

Mark Waier, communicat­ions director for Los Angeles World Airports, said in a written statement Friday that the proposed project “will improve safety and security and provide operationa­l efficienci­es.”

“In addition to much needed renovation­s to aging terminal facilities, the project could include up to four additional aircraft gates to accommodat­e existing demand at LAX,” Waier said.

El Segundo lodged an appeal against the plan after it was approved by the Board of Airport Commission­ers last month, arguing that airport officials failed to properly analyze and mitigate the effects the proposed renovation would have on its residents.

For instance, the city has raised concerns about how trucks used for airport constructi­on will affect pavement conditions and safety on nearby Imperial Avenue.

“The city of El Segundo is not at war with LAX,” Coby King, a spokesman for the city, said in an emailed statement.

“Improvemen­ts to the airport will bring benefits to everyone, including the residents of El Segundo. But growth at LAX has a direct impact on the city, and we are simply looking to ensure that those impacts are addressed.”

King added that the city had been engaged in “cordial, profession­al and productive” negotiatio­ns with the airport over the plan.

The Los Angeles City Council approved the planned overhaul of the two terminals on an 11-0 vote Friday, without discussion.

LAX is pursuing a $14-billion renovation that includes terminal upgrades, transporta­tion improvemen­ts and a new concourse. Airport operators are already facing a lawsuit from a parking operator over another part of the renovation, the Landside Access Modernizat­ion Project, which is intended to reduce traffic congestion around the busy airport.

 ?? Reed Saxon Associated Press ?? AIRPORT officials plan to tear down and rebuild parts of terminals 2 and 3 to ease crowding.
Reed Saxon Associated Press AIRPORT officials plan to tear down and rebuild parts of terminals 2 and 3 to ease crowding.

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