Eppley Airfield
Eppley Airfield | |||||||||||||||||||
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IATA: OMA – ICAO: KOMA – FAA LID: OMA | |||||||||||||||||||
Summary | |||||||||||||||||||
Owner/Operator | Omaha Airport Authority | ||||||||||||||||||
Serves | Eastern Nebraska, western Iowa | ||||||||||||||||||
Location | Omaha, Nebraska | ||||||||||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 984 ft / 300 m | ||||||||||||||||||
Coordinates | 41°18′04″N 95°53′43″W / 41.3012°N 95.8954°W | ||||||||||||||||||
Website | www.flyoma.com | ||||||||||||||||||
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OMA | |||||||||||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||||||||||
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Statistics (2009, 2010) | |||||||||||||||||||
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Eppley Airfield (IATA: OMA, ICAO: KOMA, FAA LID: OMA) is a medium hub airport three miles northeast of Omaha, Nebraska, in Douglas County, Nebraska, United States. It is by far the largest airport in Nebraska, serving ten times more passengers than all other Nebraska airports combined, and is named for Eugene C. Eppley, the Eppley Hotel magnate of Omaha, from whose estate $1.0 million was used to convert Omaha Municipal Airport into a jetport in 1959/1960.[3]
The airport occupies 2,650 acres (1,070 ha) and handles about 70-75 airline flights per day to 20 daily and 3 seasonal non-stop destinations.[4]
History
The April 1957 OAG shows 42 scheduled airline departures a day: 23 United and 19 Braniff. The first jets were United Airlines 720s in Aug-Sept 1960.
On August 6, 1966 Braniff Airways Flight 250 left Kansas City Downtown Airport headed for Eppley and crashed near Falls City, Nebraska, killing all 42 on board. The flight was waiting for weather to clear in Omaha before descending when violent turbulence compromised the structural integrity of the plane.[5]
Several films have used Eppley for a few scenes including the 2002 feature film About Schmidt which included scenes filmed inside and outside the terminal building, and the 2009 feature film Up in the Air which made use of the south end of the terminal building during filming.
The terminal building, opened in 1961, was designed by James C. Buckley, Inc.[6] Concourse B opened in 1970,[7] and it was remodeled when Concourse A opened in 1986.[8]
Midwest Airlines, then known as Midwest Express, operated a hub at Eppley Airfield from 1995 to 2002 with flights to Milwaukee, Newark, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Orlando, and Washington–Reagan; the airport remained a focus city with nonstops to Milwaukee and Washington until the merger with Frontier Airlines in 2010.[9] As of April 2015, Omaha has no international flights. The airport handled more than 4.1 million passengers in 2014. Southwest Airlines, Delta Air Lines, and American Airlines are the first-, second-, and third-largest carriers and serve about 33 percent, 22 percent, and 22 percent, respectively, of passengers.[2]
Expansion
Current
Parking Garage
On February 18, 2015, The Omaha Airport Authority board approved the plan for design work to begin on an approximately $71 million, six-story parking garage. The new garage is to be built north of the existing six-story garage, and construction on the first project would begin in about a year. The project will be expected to be completed in fall 2017. The first phase would provide 2,200 parking stalls, with 850 stalls for rental cars and 1,350 public stalls. [10]
Airport
Construction and upgrades are planned for Eppley Airfield's terminal and tarmac. An exspansion to the runway 36/18 will be added in order to have larger aircraft landing, as well as taxiway A being enlarged to handle such aircraft. Next, Concourses A and B will be joined together by a long corridor, and expanded in the northern direction, adding 8 more jetways. This expansion will also add 6-8 more security checkpoints, instead of the current two. After construction, there will be a total of 28 gates, with some able to handle larger aircraft. On either side of the "megaterminal" the ramp will be extended for overnight aircraft parking.
In January 2016, Eppley Airfield completed the expansion of its on-site United States Customs and Border Protection facility (CBP) to provide greater customs and inspection services for international passengers. While Eppley Airfield is classified as a "Port of Entry" for international flights (officially an "international airport") by United States Customs and Border Protection, there are no regularly scheduled international flights, however, the airport does handle international flight - mostly from chartered or private services.
Location
The airport is northeast of downtown Omaha in east Omaha. Although the airport is in Nebraska on the west side of the Missouri River, it is surrounded on the east, west and south by the state of Iowa: the Missouri River formerly formed an oxbow west of the land that became Eppley Airfield. The river cut off the oxbow during an 1877 flood, leaving behind Carter Lake on a portion of its former course; the Supreme Court ruled in 1893 that though the land cut off by the river's changed route now lay west of the Missouri, it remained part of Iowa. This land eventually became the city of Carter Lake, Iowa.[11]
Terminals
Central Terminal
The Central Terminal contains the ground transportation center and rental car counters.
Gate System
The gate system of Eppley Airfield is a "running total system". This means that when a new concourse begins, the gate number does not reset to 1 with the prefix of the Concourse's letter. For example, the gates go from A10 to B11; there is no B1, as the running total keeps the number going with a different prefix. Gate B20 is unused, and its boarding area is used as a security checkpoint, with access to the jetway restricted.
Airlines and destinations
Passenger
Cargo
Airlines | Destinations |
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Ameriflight | Beatrice, Grand Island, Kearney, Norfolk |
AirNet Express | Des Moines |
DHL Aviation operated by Suburban Air Freight | Cincinnati |
FedEx Express operated by Baron Aviation Services | Grand Island, Kearney, North Platte |
FedEx Express | Indianapolis, Memphis |
UPS Airlines | Billings, Louisville, Reno/Tahoe, Winnipeg |
Statistics
Top destinations
Rank | City | Passengers | Carriers |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Denver, Colorado | 290,000 | Frontier, Southwest, United |
2 | Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois | 220,000 | American, United |
3 | Chicago–Midway, Illinois | 205,000 | Southwest |
4 | Atlanta, Georgia | 201,000 | Delta |
5 | Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas | 170,000 | American |
6 | Phoenix, Arizona | 164,000 | American, Southwest |
7 | Minneapolis/St Paul, Minnesota | 159,000 | Delta |
8 | Las Vegas, Nevada | 118,000 | Southwest |
9 | St. Louis, Missouri | 103,000 | Southwest |
10 | Houston–Intercontinental, Texas | 71,000 | United |
Annual traffic
Year | Passengers | Year | Passengers |
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2002 | 3,608,231 | 2009 | 4,217,718 |
2003 | 3,667,190 | 2010 | 4,287,428 |
2004 | 3,868,217 | 2011 | 4,212,399 |
2005 | 4,193,046 | 2012 | 4,127,344 |
2006 | 4,229,856 | 2013 | 4,042,333 |
2007 | 4,421,274 | 2014 | 4,119,730 |
2008 | 4,370,137 | ||
Ground transportation
MAT Line 16[16] provides limited weekday-only rush hour service southbound toward downtown and northbound toward the North Omaha Transit Center. Passenger access is located directly outside the central terminal.
Gallery
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Eppley Airfield terminal in Omaha. The houses just beyond are in Carter Lake, Iowa (with Carter Lake visible to the right). The bluffs are in Omaha.
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Eppley on June 16, 2011 during the 2011 Missouri River floods
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Eppley Airfield and downtown Omaha
References
- ↑ FAA Airport Master Record for OMA (Form 5010 PDF), effective 2007-10-25
- 1 2 Eppley Airfield, official web site
- ↑ Eppley Grant of $1 Million Gives Omaha Jet Field - Lincoln Evening Journal, 1959-12-31
- ↑ "Non-Stop Destinations". www.flyoma.com. Retrieved 2015-04-29.
- ↑ "Braniff Airliner Hits Nebraska Bean Field". The Spokesman-Review. August 8, 1966. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
- ↑ American Aviation 24. 1960.
- ↑ Mezzy, Dick (July 5, 1970). "Eppley Elevated Terminal Ready". Lincoln Star. p. 16. Retrieved January 22, 2015.
- ↑ "Airport Authority of the City of Omaha, Airport Facilities Revenue Bonds" (PDF). www.fpr.net. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
- ↑ "Frontier Airlines and Midwest to fly under one name - Apr. 13, 2010".
- ↑ Omaha World Herald. "Easing the Parking Crunch: 6-story, 2,200-stall Garage Coming to Eppley Airfield in 2017." Omaha.com. Omaha World Herald, 18 Feb. 2015. Web. 28 Apr. 2015. <http://www.omaha.com/money/easing-the-parking-crunch--story--stall-garage-coming/article_790a6390-b6d2-11e4-9734-039b1a169392.html>.
- ↑ Nebraska v. Iowa, 406 U.S. 117 (1972).
- 1 2 "Alaska Airlines Boosts Seattle-Omaha Capacity From June 2016". Airline Route. February 2, 2016.
- ↑ "United to offer daily non-stop flight between Omaha and San Francisco". Omaha World Herald. April 16, 2016.
- ↑ "RITA - BTS - Transtats".
- ↑ "Omaha Airport Authority -".
- ↑ http://www.ometro.com/bus-system/bus-routes/east-omaha-north-16th-weekdays-only
External links
- Eppley Airfield, official site
- Eppley Airport Guide on Omaha.net
- Aviation Photos from airliners.net
- Aviation Photos from jetphotos.net
- FAA Airport Diagram (PDF), effective April 28, 2016
- FAA Terminal Procedures for OMA, effective April 28, 2016
- Resources for this airport:
- AirNav airport information for KOMA
- ASN accident history for OMA
- FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker
- NOAA/NWS latest weather observations
- SkyVector aeronautical chart for KOMA
- FAA current OMA delay information
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