The Capital

Southwest plans to add $130 million hangar

- By Meredith Cohn Staff writer

Southwest Airlines announced Thursday that it plans to build its first maintenanc­e hangar in the Northeast at BWI Marshall Airport, a move that further cements its ties to the airport and signals more growth for the airline in the region.

The Dallas-based airline is the dominant carrier at BWI, with close to 69 percent of the airport's passenger traffic, and the airport has been pushing a $60 million upgrade to the Southwest terminal to accommodat­e more traffic.

Southwest will pay for $80 million of the $130 million cost for the new 130,000square-foot hangar, with the state picking up the remaining $50 million, state and airline officials said. The state's funding is intended to cover needed infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts including utility work and site preparatio­n and will need to be approved by the state's Board of Public Works.

Airport officials expect the panel to consider the constructi­on contracts in coming months.

The hangar will give 120 airline technician­s a three-bay indoor work space to service any of the more than 240 aircraft that come through the airport a day and provide storage space for tools and equipment and office space. There will be space outside for eight more airplanes.

“This will give us much needed maintenanc­e capacity,” said Gary Kelly, Southwest's president and CEO, who was at BWI for the announceme­nt. “It's important to have it in Baltimore because it's such an important part of our route system.”

Currently, the work is done outside, no matter the weather, all year round, airline officials said.

Southwest has six other maintenanc­e hangars around the country.

The new hangar is expected to break ground in 2019 and open in late 2021, pending approval from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. The hangar will be constructe­d in the airfield's northwest quadrant, which is currently unoccupied, airport officials said.

No new maintenanc­e positions were announced at BWI, though there will be more than 450 constructi­on jobs involved on the project over the next three years. Eventually, the hangar will offer space for more workers as the airline adds more Boeing 737s to its fleet.

Kelly said the carrier expects to have about 750 airplanes by the end of the year but grow eventually to 1,200, perhaps over the next decade or two.

Baltimore-Washington Internatio­nal Thurgood Marshall Airport is Southwest's second busiest hub and the airline employs 4,837 workers at the airport.

Gov. Larry Hogan, also at BWI for the announceme­nt along with state transporta­tion officials, said Southwest and the airport are crucial to area businesses, as well as residents and tourists. He noted that BWI is the busiest of three airports in the Washington, D.C., region.

Supporting the airline will continue to boost economic developmen­t efforts in the state, Hogan said.

 ?? BWI/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Rendering shows Southwest Airlines’ plans to construct and operate a major aircraft maintenanc­e facility at BWI airport.
BWI/BALTIMORE SUN Rendering shows Southwest Airlines’ plans to construct and operate a major aircraft maintenanc­e facility at BWI airport.

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