Los Angeles Times

Work begins on $1.6-billion LAX terminal

Facility will reduce the need for travelers to exit onto tarmacs.

- By Dan Weikel

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

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