Originally Posted by
y_h
Add me to the list of those who do not believe that a "build it and they will come" philosophy is best when it comes to airport construction. As a matter of fact, it can have a downright negative effect.
Approximately 20 years ago St. Louis's principal commercial airport, Lambert International, was bustling. At the time it was the international HQ and principal hub for TWA. Lambert had 85 gates in all with about 70 of those being serviced by jet bridges since the overwhelming majority of flights were on mainliners including a fair share of jumbos such as L-1011's, DC-10's and 747's. A few years later, Southwest made a big push into St. Louis, sparking the airport authority to construct a temporary east terminal with 8 additional jet bridges. In 1988 the temporary east terminal was replaced with a brand new, state of the art structure replacing the 8 temporary gates with 16 permanent gates. Meanwhile, the powers that be in southwestern Illinois (representing the eastern quarter of the metro St. Louis population) felt that Lambert had reached maximum capacity and that a "reliever" airport should be built and serve a role not unlike that of Chicago Midway, or the southern California relievers such as Orange County, Burbank and Ontario. As a result, Mid America Airport went into service in 1997.
Well, we all know what happened to TWA - a series of bankruptcies was followed by an asset purchase by American Airlines. Seeing no need to have a hub in between its existing O'Hare and DFW outposts, American drastically reduced its St. Louis presence and has replaced most of its mainliners with RJ's - if I had to guess I'd say AA runs 80% of its STL flights with RJ's.
Today, Lambert is an absolute mess. Concourse C which during the 80's was the international concourse, is a virtual ghost town. It's jet bridges were configured to service jumbo jets and are now only able to service the occasional 757 that flies a regular route. Several of the jet bridges were dismantled about 2 years ago or cannibalized for parts for other still operational bridges in other areas of the airport. Suffice it to say that passengers arriving on the few flights that do still come into C are treated to a less than flattering first impression of STL. There are also vast stretches of Concourse D (TWA's main domestic concourse configured to service DC9's, 727's and the like) that are abandoned. Very few of the abandoned gates that passengers have to pass on their way to baggage claim are lit and most don't appear kept up at all. It's really quite embarassing and airport officials are only just now starting to address these problems. Meanwhile, over in SW Illinois, Mid America Airport sits virtually deserted. Allegiant Air flies occasional charters in and out. Other airlines (Great Plains, Pan Am) have attempted service there prior to fizzling out altogether. No major airline has ever even expressed a passing interest in utilizing the airport, and with the large scale availability of gates at Lambert, it's doubtful Mid America will ever enjoy any type of regular commercial service. Airlines looking to move into the St. Louis market or expand existing service have literally dozens of gates to choose from at Lambert.
The St. Louis example might be a bit of an extreme tale - clearly at the time of expansion and construction there was an articulable if now downright legitimate justification for airport expansion, however all it took was one event (in this case the downfall of TWA) to create a huge problem. Obviously nobody's advocating an expansion of Will Rogers to 85+ gates, however even a doubling of gates beyond the amount presently needed will create an image of a failed airport. So long as the space exists for expansion and there are plans on the books that can be utilized to build needed expansion, airlines will not overlook OKC as an expansion option. I think it's in Will Rogers's and OKC's best interest to focus on completing the ongoing phase of expansion and to concentrate on running a clean and efficient airport that gives the appearance of being busy but not overwhelmed. Obviously if all of the gates are constantly in use and airlines are clamoring for gate space, then there's justification for going ahead with the east concourse, but if not, I think it's best to perfect what you've got and hope that there's interest among the airlines to bring more and larger planes to OKC. A ghost town of an airport does nothing to impress out of town businesses who might be looking at your community - it makes you look like fools or has-beens.
In any event, I haven't flown into WRWA in over 12 years. I'm coming in the first week of November and I'm really looking forward to seeing the improvements. When I lived in OKC I really liked the "old" WRWA - it may have been small, but it was well run and I never felt like I had to get there an hour before my flight or fear missing it.
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