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Thread: Great Plains International Airport

  1. #76

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by no1cub17 View Post
    Certainly that's a possibility - my question is - is there a business case for a private developer to come in and build such a line?
    Probably not. Private developers normally don't build transportation infrastructure.

    And if not (there is not), how many billions of our tax dollars would it take to get a HSR to Dallas up and running - and is there a better use of the billions of dollars?
    Many billions.

    Almost certainly. We live in an incredibly unwalkable city for the most part, so why don't we spend some money making our city one that would even be conducive to supporting a HSR line first, before building it in the first place. Just because you build a rail line doesn't mean anyone will use it. There's little logic in taking a train from one unwalkable city (with poor to non-existent mass transit) to another - which is what an OKC to Dallas HSR line would accomplish. And I don't want to hear about how central Dallas is urban and walkable - it's not. DART's poor ridership numbers reflect that.
    Well that's why I listed over 20 things that I thought OKC should do to improve the city, including metro-wide rail transit. I'm also counting on a national high speed rail system in that calculation as well. But theoretically, I could live in a suburban home in the metro, walk 5 or 6 blocks to a rail station, and take the train all the way to the airport. Or with high speed rail, I could take it down to Dallas, and from there, I could go most places in the country. That's all without getting into a car.

    I think that HSR access would give OKC a big competitive advantage over other cities our size. More people will move here. More businesses will move here. It isn't just about better serving the existing population, it's about making the city an attractive and convenient place to be. A metro area of 1.3 million people is a lot different from one of say, 1.9 million.

  2. #77

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by Just the facts View Post
    Back to Catch22's comnent about direct flights. OKC has 3 flights to LAX. If I want to go to LAX dirctly I can pick one if those 3 flights. How many flights does DFW have to LAX?

    Also how many flights to LAX does OKC, Tulsa, and Wichita have?
    Fine - then how about how many OKC-DFW flights are there? Quite a few, which easily connect to the even more DFW-LAX (or SNA, or SFO, or SJC, or wherever else you're trying to go). That's still much more time efficient than what you're proposing. 3x/day to LAX is pretty good service for a city OKC's size.

  3. #78

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    He seems intent on replicating the hub and spoke model, except where one leg is on a train to the hub, instead of an airplane to the hub.

    In other words, he is trying to reinvent the wheel here. Pardon the pun (hub and spoke).

  4. #79

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by hoyasooner View Post
    Probably not. Private developers normally don't build transportation infrastructure.



    Many billions.



    Well that's why I listed over 20 things that I thought OKC should do to improve the city, including metro-wide rail transit. I'm also counting on a national high speed rail system in that calculation as well. But theoretically, I could live in a suburban home in the metro, walk 5 or 6 blocks to a rail station, and take the train all the way to the airport. Or with high speed rail, I could take it down to Dallas, and from there, I could go most places in the country. That's all without getting into a car.

    I think that HSR access would give OKC a big competitive advantage over other cities our size. More people will move here. More businesses will move here. It isn't just about better serving the existing population, it's about making the city an attractive and convenient place to be. A metro area of 1.3 million people is a lot different from one of say, 1.9 million.
    There are many cases of private rail lines all over the world - private lines directly compete with JR in Japan in many cities. Italo is a new HSR network that connects Italy's major cities and directly competes with Trenitalia, so there is precedent. Amtrak was nationalized because after the rise of air travel in the 60s-70s, long distance rail travel became inefficient and too expensive. And as projects in other states have shown, there will need to be significant tax dollars committed to such a project for it to become viable (granted - I'd much rather shunt my tax dollars toward a HSR than the BLVD).

    Again - I'm not so sure. I think if we tried to build a metro-wide rail system, we'd run into the exact same problems DART has - is that you basically need a car at both ends to make it work - which makes the transit system pointless to begin with. Certainly that's an excellent goal to have - is that even people who live in the suburbs could walk a few blocks to a train station - and, assuming that train ran with a usable enough frequency (for an airport line, I'm just guessing but that would be at least every 30 min), hop on a train that could bring them downtown or to the airport. But I'm skeptical for a few reasons - 1) we're not a walking city - it doesn't cross the minds of most people here to walk. That's just how it is - 2) we simply aren't built dense enough (outside of a few neighborhoods in the core) - to realistically support metro-rail throughout the city. Sure, you might be willing to walk 5-6 blocks, but how many others would? How many families with suitcases would? I'm guessing not too many.

    Your list is excellent though - if we accomplish a lot of those things and manage to construct a usable transit system (even if limited in scope), then certainly we might see the benefits of HSR - and it may even be worth the cost. Something to keep an eye on is California's HSR line from SF to LA - I'm curious how it does given that one of those is very walkable and transit oriented, and the other, well, isn't.

  5. #80

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Well, there are currently plans to build a metro-wide rail system. It has support from Mick Cornett and from a lot of the politicians from surrounding cities. It will probably take 20 years to complete it. I disagree that "we're not a walking city". The reason we don't walk is because we are quite spread out. I see people walk around Bricktown all the time. When you give someone a comfortable walking environment, they are more than willing to use it.

    That's not to say that Cletus McRedneck who weighs 300 lbs and rides his Rascal scooter everywhere is going to suddenly take up jogging just because there's a train station 12 blocks away. But if we build things right, rail can become a viable transportation option for a lot of people. We'll see how the streetcar goes and how many people use it. The goal with a metro rail system would be to have transit oriented development at every stop. Imagine if, at every stop, you had a little mini-Bricktown/Deep Deuce. Two or three blocks in each direction with apartments, restaurants, shops and entertainment.

  6. #81

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    You are also not taking into account what the impact of 4 million more travelers a year would do for DFW airfares.

    That kind of demand surge would send tickets skyrocketing. And American Airlines would have a DIRECT monopoly on the OKC market, whereas right now it's fairly segmented.

    United's offerings out of Dallas are only slightly better than their offerings out of OKC. Delta has pretty much the same destinations out of Dallas that we do, only on more frequent and larger equipment.

    The result, AA would raise prices across the board because the demand would be there to justify it.

    I'm sure AA would love it. Oklahoma would shut down it's two largest airports, and force it's citizens into buying nonstop flights on American, out of their largest fortress hub at whatever price AA wanted to charge.

    The more I think about either of your ideas (Great Plains Intl. or HSR to DFW and shutting down OKC and TUL) the more I find they would be a complete failure, and a complete disservice to passengers.

  7. #82

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Look at Cincinnati (CVG) and St. Louis (STL). CVG serves a population about the size of Tulsa+OKC, it is no longer a hub and barely has better service than OKC. STL serves an area the size of OKC, TUL and ICT and also pretty much only flies non-stop to hubs. Airline consolidation has drastically reduced the number of hubs and the latest round will decrease the number further. There is no way GPI would become a hub in this environment, yes maybe if everything worked out right it might get non-stop service to MIA, but that wouldn't make up for the huge inconvenience of basically making every flight at least a 1-stop (first leg on HSR).

    Fares out of hub cities are traditionally higher. When I lived in Cincinnati, CVG was still a Delta hub and was rated they most expensive airport every year I lived there. It was cheaper for me to fly from Dayton through CVG than O&D out of CVG directly. Speaking of, if any two airports were going to merge DAY and CVG would make much more sense, but that won't happen either.

    Further, what would you tell the 7000 AA employees at TUL when you kick them out onto the street? AA uses the normal flight activity to get the narrow-bodies in and out of TUL (ever wonder why they have so much 757 service into TUL?). AA just closed their maintenance base at AFW in part because of the expensive ferry flight between DFW and AFW.

  8. #83

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Okay - now I have keyboard. So here are a few things to address some of the issues raised.

    If planning started on this today it would take 20 years to open (Catch22 will be retired). Who knows what the aviation industry will look like in 20 years, but whatever it looks I am pretty sure that the more passengers an airport serves the better air service that airport has. OKC is trying to grow its passenger count, but to what end, if not to get more flights to more cities? What wait X number of years to double passenger traffic at WRWA when it could be done all at once with a consolidated airport?

    Multiple cities in the past have proposed a shared airport but usually distance was a deal killer (that and pride I guess) - but with HSR distance doesn't really matter. Couple HSR with city-side check in, baggage claim, security check point, car rentals, etc... and total travel time decrease even more. Yes, there is some additional time needed upfront, but if it prevents a stop in another airport or allows one to get to their destination sooner (because of more frequent service) then it is a net gain for the traveler.

    Will the business community go for it? They will if they can get to where they want to go faster and cheaper. Some of you are just assuming this won't be faster or cheaper but the truth is, none of us know that. It would take someone with a lot more data than we have available to even begin to tackle that question. Yes this has a cost to it, but so does running 3 airports. I didn't include cost because this is just the concept stage.

    Will the airlines go for it? Frankly, I don't care if the airlines will go for it or not. They are a business and will conform to what the customer wants. They don't dictate to us, we dictate to them. Plus, the major carriers at Stapleton also opposed building the new DIA but we see how that turned out. The people in Denver did it anyhow. Now try to talk United out of DIA.

    Alas, I get that I am the only who thinks this could work, but I am no stranger to standing on an island. Eight years ago there wasn't a whole lot of people talking walkability and urban design either.

  9. #84

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Stapleton was created because of space issues. Not because they wanted a combined airport between metros.

    The only reason Stapleton doesn't have service now, is that it is gone. The Super 8 I just booked to sleep in on the way to Portland is in its place.

    The small space restricted airports are often in the most demand. LGA DCA, DAL is picking up steam, and so is HOU. SNA is pushed to its limits. MDW is also bursting at the seams.

    As long as there is a runway in OKC and a runway in TUL, the airlines will do whatever it takes to keep service at the city. Demolishing WRWA and TIA is a nonstarter. OKC and TUL handle much more than just commercial aviation. And those services will want to continue to be in OKC and TUL. So the airports would not be demolished. And if the airports aren't demolished, the airlines will exhaust every option to keep service at them no matter what you built up the turnpike.

  10. #85

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    I don't understand why you think a HSR connection to Perry is any different than a flight connection to DFW. If you do security/checking bags before you board the train, you still have to get to the train an hour early. Travel time from OKC to GPI would be at least as long as the flight to DFW, then you have a layover once you get to GPI, probably at least 40 minutes could be a couple hours depending on timing of rail service and flights. So no matter what I have a 1 connection equivalent, as opposed to the ~14 non-stop options I have today. All 1-stop flights now effectively become 2-stop trips. No one from OKC that had to connect through DFW would take the train to GPI, they'd just drive to DFW so there goes a ton of the PAX. There is no way you could time the rail service perfectly to eliminate the layover at GPI.

    See my post about STL, even 3M people isn't enough to get you good non-stop options with a massive airport already centered in the middle of everything.

    DFW is easy to get into and is a great airport with tons of flight options, but now that the Wright Amendment is gone DAL is growing like crazy and not just with Southwest. Delta, Virgin and others were all fighting for the gates that the DOJ made AA give up. Even though DFW is AA's largest hub, they still wanted those 4 gates at DAL, because it gave them a piece of the business traveler that didn't want to go the extra 30 minutes to DFW. If the 20 gate limitation at DAL went away tomorrow, you'd see a lot more growth at DAL at the determent of DFW. This just shows that customers and airlines like airports as close to the center of town as possible.

  11. #86

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Kerry, I can tell you really believe this but it's just not feasible and, despite what you think, the airlines are totally in the driver's seat on this issue. It would never "fly".

  12. #87

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by Just the facts View Post
    As an alternative, I would also be completely happy closing WRWA and just building HSR directly to DFW.
    Ha! Well as someone who flies out of WRWA 2-3 times a month and enjoys the convenience of living downtown and being less than 15 minutes from my airport ...I'm really glad you don't have any say in that.

  13. #88

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by catch22 View Post
    Go ask Devon and GE if they want to send their employees 50 miles up the turnpike so they can fly to Houston. You may be a part of the business community, but you are certainly not a representative of the OKC business community as a whole.
    No doubt...

  14. #89

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by PhiAlpha View Post
    Ha! Well as someone who flies out of WRWA 2-3 times a month and enjoys the convenience of living downtown and being less than 15 minutes from my airport ...I'm really glad you don't have any say in that.
    Yes, I agree 1000%.

  15. #90

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Well, just think about it and remember, you heard about GPI here first.

  16. #91

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    You still haven't told me what I'm missing - or any of the rest of us for that matter.

    And the Denver example is completely, utterly irrelevant. Including that as your argument basically nullifies everything else you're saying, because a "GPI" and the new DIA aren't even remotely close to the same concept.

    Yes, we heard about GPI here first, and hopefully last, because it's just that detached from reality.

    Yes, 8 years ago not many were interested in urbanism and walkability, but a "GPI" would do absolutely nothing to encourage either.

    P.S. I'm confused now - which is it that you're advocating for - a GPI or the elimination of spokes altogether? If we eliminate OKC, TUL, ICT, etc and consolidate all of our regional air service at DFW, then are you suggesting that as a country, we eliminate all airports that aren't major international hubs? So the only airports that remained would be DFW, IAH, ATL, ORD, JFK, LAX, SFO, and a handful of others? What's the difference between eliminating OKC and MEM, or LIT, or OMA, or any other mid-service airport?

  17. #92

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    It's a little frustrating because some of you aren't reading what I am typing.

    Quick example: Never said WRWA would be torn down.
    The DIA comment was a direct response to the airlines not wanting it. Never said anything about the type of high speed connection to get to GPI.

    Anyhow, it was just a conceptual discussion to better connect OKC with the rest of the world. If everyone else is happy with the current strategy then so be it.

  18. #93
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    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    The idea of GPI is DOA.

    Linked does not by itself make it better. Focus on people and what they need instead of what a SYSTEM theoretically needs to be to give the illusion of being efficient.

  19. #94

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by Just the facts View Post
    It's a little frustrating because some of you aren't reading what I am typing.

    Quick example: Never said WRWA would be torn down.
    The DIA comment was a direct response to the airlines not wanting it. Never said anything about the type of high speed connection to get to GPI.

    Anyhow, it was just a conceptual discussion to better connect OKC with the rest of the world. If everyone else is happy with the current strategy then so be it.
    Fine - so you never said "tear down" WRWA - just end all commercial service - picking nits IMO.

    Which airlines didn't want DIA? Pretty sure UA (which is still the dominant player) had significant input into the design of the new DEN.

    The irony is eliminating commercial service at WRWA would do nothing but disconnect OKC from the business world.

    Also frustrating when you keep calling us out for what not reading what you're typing, but you also won't point out what exactly we're missing (even after being asked multiple times).

    Anyway seems as though this thread has run it's course!

  20. #95

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Maybe the future is mega-airports with 'last mile' hsr connections to regional cities.

  21. #96

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by no1cub17 View Post
    Then you either a) connect in (insert hub here) to get to SJC, OAK, or SMF via the quickest one-stop option, or b) you take the nonstop to SFO and hop on the train (or your Uber) to your destination. Either way will save time and expense. You conveniently leave out the cost of the HSR ticket and time required. Currently an OKC-DFW flight is 30 minutes in the air, one hour gate to gate (give or take). With AA's banks you can usually make your connecting flight within 40 minutes to an hour, and you still checked your bags (how many business travelers actually check bags?) in OKC. Granted this is just one airline but it's the one I'm most familiar with so that's why I used it as my example.

    HSR tickets won't be cheap. Tokyo to Osaka one-way is routinely $150-200 or more on the Nozomi. What makes you think that an OKC-Dallas HSR could be significantly cheaper and faster?
    All of this is true, not to mention another major issue...why would HSR connect DT OKC directly to DFW and not to the Dallas and Fort Worth city centers first? It wouldn't make any sense to connect from city center to airport. You miss an entire group of people that would be going to the Dallas and/or Fort Worth specifically to stay in those cities without intending to fly out of them.

  22. #97

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by no1cub17 View Post
    Which airlines didn't want DIA? Pretty sure UA (which is still the dominant player) had significant input into the design of the new DEN.
    Both United and Continental fought DIA until the Denver vote passed. They even claimed it would put them out of business and funded opposition to try and stop it. Their real fear was the larger airport with more capacity and efficiency would allow other airlines to cut into market share.

  23. #98

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by PhiAlpha View Post
    All of this is true, not to mention another major issue...why would HSR connect DT OKC directly to DFW and not to the Dallas and Fort Worth city centers first? It wouldn't make any sense to connect from city center to airport. You miss an entire group of people that would be going to the Dallas and/or Fort Worth specifically to stay in those cities without intending to fly out of them.
    For the love of Pete. Maybe this type of forumn is the wrong place for this kind of discussion . If anyone wants to discuss this at a local watering hole let me know.

  24. #99

    Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    Quote Originally Posted by Just the facts View Post
    Both United and Continental fought DIA until the Denver vote passed. They even claimed it would put them out of business and funded opposition to try and stop it. Their real fear was the larger airport with more capacity and efficiency would allow other airlines to cut into market share.
    Exactly - so they were afraid of competition - not afraid of a larger, more capable facility (par for the course for United). Now the distance from downtown Denver- that's another can of worms entirely, but not the point.

    I think any of us would be up for discussing this anytime! On the bright side, maybe a green car ticket on the HSR to DFW would include a beverage or two...

  25. Default Re: Great Plains International Airport

    I'm just as lost as anyone. I don't see any benefit to the consumer in replacing the OKC-DFW flights with HSR in exchange for shutting down all other commercial flight options. The anti-competitive nature of everything would just make this a non-starter. You funnel everyone to DFW where AA is dominate. Sure, maybe you add an additional option to get people to Love Field for WN, but it still leaves out UA, DL, G4, and AS. If I have status with either of those carriers (except G4 of course), why would I want to take a train to DFW to connect to a flight on DL to ATL to connect to my destination? Why is this a better option than just flying from OKC to ATL and connecting on.

    That is where the disconnect is at...there is no definition of the logic on why this would be a good idea or favorable for the consumer. As far as the consumer being in the drivers seat...this is the airline industry we are talking about. Strong record profits are being posted right now, high load factors, and most cities with some of the best connections they've had in awhile. Of course that isn't to mean that some cities aren't still hurting big time due to the lack of overall competition thanks to consolidation. Those are typically going to be your cities with in 50-75 miles of a major hub. If anything, those cities are your candidates for HSR connections to major hubs...not OKC. I can get people in CAK or TOL driving an hour-ish to CLE or DTW respectfully...I still can't grasp people driving 2-3 hours to DFW from the OKC area. Regardless...that is for another thread.

    Shutting commercial operations at TUL and OKC is a non-starter. ICT wouldn't go for shutting down and letting all that tax revenue go to Oklahoma. Let's also not leave out the massive additional operations at TUL and OKC that need the air fields to say open. There are also services that will end up being duplicated at this GPI...FAA, customs, emergency services, etc. Not to mention to paycheck airports get for having commercial passenger operations from the FAA for upgrades to infrastructure.

    Again, if we were in Rockford, Akron, Toledo, Youngstown, Dayton, Lexington, Trenton, etc...there might be a point to all of this. Those medium sized cities don't have extremely extensive local air service and could be easily serviced with HSR to a regionalized air hub...but in the end it still would impact local economies when businesses are trying to fly employees directly into cities or out. Having the airport with flights in the local area means a lot to the business community. Your cheap fair weather flyers will go where they want, but if I have a business meeting in Akron...I want to fly into Akron if at all possible and not have to worry about flying into Cleveland and catching a train. Especially when I'll have to hope my flight isn't late if there is only one train left for the day. That's not even touching the issues of how many trains per day do you run to make it work without burning through cash or causing it to be entirely inconvenient for passengers.

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