San Antonio Express-News

S.A. airport’s baggage keeps it from taking off

- By Wesley Ratko and Greg Jefferson STAFF WRITERS

If you’ve flown out of San Antonio Internatio­nal Airport lately, you know that the crowds of passengers are back.

In October, 892,000 travelers passed through the city-owned facility. That worked out to nearly 100 percent of the total for the same month in 2019, just before the COVID-19 pandemic laid waste to the air travel industry.

But San Antonio Internatio­nal’s resurgence isn’t all good news. It’s highlighti­ng some of the airport’s long-standing deficienci­es.

Travelers who stayed home during the worst of the pandemic are finding the number of nonstop flights out of San Antonio is still small compared to Austinberg­strom Internatio­nal, which is close enough to siphon off area passengers who really hate connecting flights. And as travelers crowd cattlelike into Terminal A’s concourse, one of the narrowest among bigcity airports — well, it’s just as they remember it.

Those are the problems we see up close at the airport. To see the biggest one, we have to step back.

The city that the airport serves is growing — to such an extent that the travel demands of San Antonians will exceed the facility’s capacity in the near future.

Between 2010 and 2020, the metro area grew by more than 400,000 people, an increase of 16 percent. At that pace, airport officials expect annual passenger totals to exceed 14 million by 2040.

That’s why the city of San Antonio is embarking on a 20-year, $2.5 billion expansion and redevelopm­ent of San Antonio Internatio­nal. Approved by City Council a year ago, the master plan calls for the extension of one of the airport’s two main runways, the constructi­on of a new Terminal C and an additional parking garage, and the remaking of Terminal A.

The city will pay for the capital project — one of the biggest in San Antonio history — with a mix of federal and state grants, bonds and facility charges paid by air travelers and airlines.

At this point, the airport’s expansion is largely conceptual.

Corgan, a Dallas-based architectu­re and design firm, is currently drafting plans for Terminal C and other airport projects under a contract worth $3.8 million over three years. But Terminal C — the largest project within the master plan — will be under constructi­on in 2024, with its opening planned for 2028.

To understand how big the challenges are that airport officials are trying to overcome, we compare key aspects of San Antonio Internatio­nal’s offerings and operations to peer facilities around the country, including Austin-bergstrom.

Let’s start with the number of nonstop flights out of San Antonio.

Want to fly nonstop from San Antonio to Beijing? Sorry — you literally can’t get there from here. The airport’s runways are too short.

The maximum distance an airplane can fly is determined by the amount of fuel in its tanks. To fly nonstop to Europe or Asia, you need big jets with big fuel tanks. The more fuel you load onto a plane for long internatio­nal flights, the heavier it becomes, and heavy planes need longer runways in order to get off the ground.

San Antonio’s longest runways measure 8,505 feet — which is about a thousand feet short of accommodat­ing the long-distance commercial airliners capable of reaching premium destinatio­ns such as London, Frankfurt or Dubai. However, the airport master plan notes that big jets — such as the Boeing 757-200 and 767-300/ 400ER — can fly to Europe from San Antonio’s runways “but with reduced payloads only.”

Of the 40 destinatio­ns reachable by nonstop flights out of San Antonio, the farthest are Boston and Seattle, both only 1,500 nautical miles away.

The San Antonio airport’s master plan notes several commercial jets that are capable of making these nonstop internatio­nal flights:

• The Airbus A350-900 seats up to 325 passengers and requires 9,450 feet of runway for takeoff;

• The Boeing 767-200ER needs 10,500 feet of runway for takeoff;

• The Boeing 787-9 requires 13,200 feet for takeoff.

But no matter how long your runways are, they need to be configured properly.

Extended runways are essential for longer direct flights, but the ability to coordinate several takeoffs and landings at the same time is also crucial.

Runways are built in relation to prevailing winds, or the direction from which the wind usually blows. And many of the world’s busiest airports provide several parallel runways (the standard in the U.S. is 3,000 feet apart) to allow for simultaneo­us takeoffs and landings.

Normally, when runways are due for reconstruc­tion because of age- and weather-related wear and tear, Federal Aviation Administra­tion funding is available to help pay for the upgrades. However, an assessment of San Antonio Internatio­nal’s crosswind runway concluded that it was no longer required, making the runway ineligible for FAA funding.

Airport officials have not included the constructi­on of additional parallel runways in their 2040 planning horizon.

But runways are just one of the factors holding San Antonio back. You also need demand.

Longer, better configured runways and desirable local attraction­s — Orlando, Fla., has both. That’s why its airport has 124 percent more takeoffs and landings than San Antonio.

The Orlando airport has four runways 9,000 feet long or longer, which gives airlines the flexibilit­y to fly just about anywhere in the world. As far as attraction­s, take your pick: Disney World, Universal Orlando Resort, Seaworld or the Kennedy Space Center.

The Orlando airport offers 139 nonstop flights. In 2019, it boarded 24.2 million passengers. Of the airports we looked at, only one airport had higher numbers: Charlotte-douglas Internatio­nal Airport in North Carolina.

Charlotte is a national center of banking and finance and home to the headquarte­rs of nine Fortune 500 companies, including Bank of America and Lowes. The enduring strength of the U.S. financial services industry goes a long way in explaining why Charlotte saw the smallest drop in passenger counts from PRE-COVID levels. In other words: business travelers.

Area residents’ financial wherewitha­l — their ability to pay for plane tickets to vacation destinatio­ns or to visit family — is another big factor in how many flights an airport will offer. Apart from Orlando, home to many lower-wage workers in the service industry, including tourism, San Antonio has the lowest median income of the metro areas we analyzed.

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 ?? Sam Owens/staff photograph­er ?? In August, 813,000 travelers passed through the city-owned facility, about 93 percent of the average monthly totals in 2019.
Sam Owens/staff photograph­er In August, 813,000 travelers passed through the city-owned facility, about 93 percent of the average monthly totals in 2019.

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