Work begins on $1.6-billion LAX terminal
Facility will reduce the need for travelers to exit onto tarmacs.
Marking another milestone in the massive renovation of Los Angeles International Airport, city officials broke ground Monday on a $1.6-billion midfield passenger terminal that will have a dozen gates for aircraft.
The project, which is scheduled to be finished in late 2019, will help accommodate growth at LAX and reduce the use of the airport’s outdoor gates, where passengers exit planes onto the tarmac and take buses to the Tom Bradley International Terminal.
“This is a transformative project,” L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti told scores of city officials, local dignitaries and airport contractors who attended the groundbreaking. “It’s a win for Los Angeles, a win for tourism and a win for everyone.”
Phase 1 of the so-called Midfield Satellite Concourse will be built immediately west of the Bradley terminal, which underwent a $2.1-billion remodel and expansion that was completed in 2015.
The five-story concourse is to include a 750,000square-foot terminal filled with lounges, retail and dining concessions as well as a baggage system. The building will be connected to the Bradley terminal by a 1,000foot passenger tunnel equipped with moving walkways. Shuttle buses will take passengers to other terminals.
Airport officials say the 12 new gates will help reduce a shortage of aircraft gates and provide space for planes while other terminal upgrades are underway. Two gates will accommodate the largest commercial aircraft.
A second phase of construction planned for the future could add as many as seven more gates if needed.
Plans for the current project also call for new taxiways and a ramp tower to better direct the movement of aircraft on the ground, particularly behind Bradley, where visibility is limited.
The concourse is one of the so-called “green-lighted” projects that can proceed under a 2006 court settlement that ended a lawsuit brought by neighborhood groups opposed to the airport development plans of former Mayor James Hahn.
“This project symbolizes the partnership between the airport and the community,” L.A. Councilman Mike Bonin said.
Airport officials say the new terminal will help accommodate growth at LAX, which is now the premier West Coast gateway to the U.S. and the nation’s second-busiest airport.
Last year, LAX handled a record 80.9 million air travelers. Regional planners predict the volume could reach 98.6 million by 2040.
The midfield concourse is part of an ongoing $14-billion modernization of LAX, which has received low ratings for years in public opinion surveys.
Officials estimate that construction of the concourse will provide about 6,000 jobs and $300 million in wages. At least 15% of the work will be done by small businesses, they say, and more than half the 250-plus contractors are based in Los Angeles County. Several hundred permanent jobs are likely to be created to staff new concessions and service new airline flights once the work is completed.
dan.weikel@latimes.com