Rick Husband Amarillo International Airport

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Rick Husband
Amarillo International Airport
Amarillo Texas airport satellite photo 1997.jpg
IATA: AMAICAO: KAMAFAA LID: AMA
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner City of Amarillo
Operator Amarillo Airport Department
Serves Amarillo, Texas
Elevation AMSL 3,607 ft / 1,099.4 m
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Website http://airport.amarillo.gov
Map
AMA is located in Texas
AMA
AMA
Location within Texas
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
4/22 13,502 4,115 Concrete
13/31 7,901 2,408 Concrete
Statistics (2007)
Aircraft operations 98,058
Based aircraft 40

Rick Husband Amarillo International Airport (IATA: AMAICAO: KAMAFAA LID: AMA) is a public airport six miles (10 km) east of downtown Amarillo, in Potter and Randall Counties, Texas, United States.[1] The airport was renamed in 2003 after NASA astronaut and Amarillo native Rick Husband, who died in the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in February of that year.

History

Harold English opened English Field in 1929. That year Transcontinental & Western Air (the forerunner to TWA) started airline service through Amarillo. Later Braniff International, Continental Airlines and Trans-Texas Airways (later Texas International) operated flights to Lubbock and Dallas. Trans World Airlines operated flights to Wichita, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago, Albuquerque, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles (a nonstop 727 to LAX started in 1967). Braniff operated Lockheed Electras to Denver and Oklahoma City. Frontier Airlines operated Convair 580s to Denver and Memphis with intermediate stops in Colorado, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. The April 1957 OAG shows 23 weekday departures: 11 Braniff, 8 TWA, 2 Central and 2 Continental. The first scheduled jets into Amarillo were on TWA in 1964.

In 1952 the name changed to Amarillo Air Terminal. After the adjacent Amarillo Air Force Base was deactivated in 1968 a portion became part of Amarillo Air Terminal. The primary instrument runway, built for the USAF Strategic Air Command base, at 13,502 feet (4,115 m) is among the longest commercial runways in the United States and is still used for military training. During the mid-1970s the airport was used for jet training by (then) West German national airline Deutsche Lufthansa AG.[2] In 1976 the airport changed its name to Amarillo International Airport upon the opening of a U.S. Customs facility, which has since been closed.

Southwest Airlines initiated service to Amarillo in 1978[3] with non-stop service to Dallas-Love Field.

The original English Field terminal building was converted in 1997 to a museum maintained by the Texas Aviation Historical Society. This museum lost its lease with the City of Amarillo and is now located in buildings southeast of the main runway, formally known as Attebury Grain.[4] The name of the original airfield is memorialized in the English Fieldhouse, a local restaurant located adjacent to the general aviation terminal.

In 2003 the airport terminal building was rededicated to NASA astronaut Rick Husband, the commander of mission STS-107 of the Space Shuttle Columbia and an Amarillo native. Husband and his crew were killed when the Columbia disintegrated upon re-entry on February 1, 2003.

The terminal building underwent a $52.2 million renovation that was designed by the firms Reynolds, Smith & Hills and Shiver Megert and Associates and completed in 2011.[5]

Visits by NASA Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA)

On July 1, 2007 the Space Shuttle Atlantis made a stop at the airport while being piggybacked from Edwards Air Force Base to Florida—one of the few visits by the shuttle to a commercial airport. After a brief stay it was flown on to Offutt Air Force Base.

In 2009 the airport was again used as a refueling stop by the SCA. On September 20, the Space Shuttle Discovery was transported from Edwards Air Force Base to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida with stops in Amarillo, Carswell AFB in Ft.Worth, and Barksdale AFB in Louisiana.

Facilities and aircraft

Rick Husband Amarillo International Airport covers 3,547 acres (1,435 ha) and has two concrete runways: 4/22 is 13,502 x 200 ft (4,115 x 61 m) and 13/31 is 7,901×150 ft (2,408×46 m). In 2007 the airport had 98,058 aircraft operations, average 268 per day: 48% military, 29% general aviation, 14% air taxi and 9% scheduled commercial. 40 aircraft were then based at this airport: 52% single-engine, 18% multi-engine, 28% jet and 3% helicopter.[1] Leading Edge Corporation has an aircraft painting facility at the airport; many United Airlines planes are painted there.

Airlines and destinations

Airlines Destinations
American Eagle Dallas/Fort Worth
Southwest Airlines Dallas-Love, Las Vegas
United Express Denver, Houston-Intercontinental

Top destinations

Top domestic routes out of AMA
(Aug 2014 – Jul 2015)
[6]
Rank City Passengers Carriers
1 Dallas-Love Field, TX 111,000 Southwest
1 Dallas-Fort Worth, TX 111,000 American
3 Denver, CO 43,000 United
4 Houston, TX 38,000 United
5 Las Vegas, NV 34,000 Southwest

See also

References

External links