CARLSBAD: New airport terminal to open in December
$24 million project paid for with federal grants, county cash
This story has been modified since its original posting
By BARBARA HENRY - Staff Writer | ∞
NCT
With the control tower in the background, Julio Oropeza uses a drill as he and other construction workers build the new terminal building now under construction at McClellan-Palomar Airport in Carlsbad on Wednesday. (Photo by Hayne Palmour IV - staff photographer)
With the control tower in the background, construction workers build the new terminal building at McClellan-Palomar Airport in Carlsbad on Wednesday. (Photo by Hayne Palmour IV - staff photographer)
With the control tower in the background, Sergio Magana, right, and Mike Schorr work on the new terminal building now under construction at McClellan-Palomar Airport in Carlsbad on Wednesday. (Photo by Hayne Palmour IV - staff photographer) CARLSBAD ---- People planning to fly home for the Christmas holidays may experience a new terminal at McClellan-Palomar Airport, but some regular airport travelers have said they hope the place doesn't prove too popular.
That's because the airport is one of North County's best-kept secrets. It's a place where folks can park for free and cruise through security with little delay.
But to airport officials, the commercial passenger area ---- an aging trailer near the control tower --- was badly in need of a replacement. Work on the new terminal began late last year and a grand opening is planned for early December.
"It is exciting; people have been talking about a new terminal for 20 or so years, and it's becoming a reality," Assistant Airport Manager Olivier "OB" Brackett said Monday as he gave a tour of the construction site.
The airport site, a 255-acre parcel along Palomar Airport Road just west of El Camino Real, is a maze of orange traffic cones, yellow caution tape and big dirt piles these days. In addition to the terminal work near the airport's main entryway, the airport also is gaining new long-term parking lots along its southern edge.
The parking lots are scheduled to be paved in two weeks and an elevator between the lots and the terminal building is expected to be installed in six weeks. Brackett said.
Work began on the new terminal late last year, and things are moving along on schedule, construction superintendent Mike Kelly said. Most of the framing for the 18,000-square-foot complex is already in place, and the yellow insulation materials should be installed within the next several weeks, he added.
"Electricity, plumbing are all going full-scale ahead," he told Brackett with a big grin.
An improved experience
The Federal Aviation Administration is paying $13.2 million of the project's $24 million price tag. The remainder is being picked up by the county of San Diego, which owns the property and operates the airport.
The sleek, modern terminal, with its seashore-themed decorative touches, is expected to shove the airport into the 21st century. Commercial passengers at McClellan-Palomar now depart for planes after spending time in a small, aging portable building near the control tower.
The new facility will have a special baggage distribution area and a full-service restaurant, officials said. Passengers will clear security and gather in a pre-boarding room where they will find wireless Internet service and plenty of spots to plug in electronic equipment, Brackett said. There's even a little bit of outdoor seating in a glassed-in area.
"The passenger experience is going to be significantly improved," Brackett said, laughing as he added that any improvement would make a big difference.
The existing "holding area" where passengers wait after clearing security doesn't even have bathrooms, he said.
While the project may give the airport a much more impressive terminal, some regular commercial plane passengers have said that they hope the changes don't encourage more people to use the place.
In fact, when the plans were unveiled for the terminal, several travelers urged a reporter to write as little about the airport as possible, saying they wanted it to remain a "secret."
One Carlsbad woman said she deliberately didn't tell friends she used the airport for vacation trips because she didn't want to fight for parking spaces. A business traveler, who said he used the airport once a month, refused to say how quickly the boarding process typically took, adding that everyone would want to use the place if they knew.
Humming with activity
Airport officials have said they hope that the new construction at the airport will encourage more commercial carriers to use the place. The only daily commercial service now at McClellan-Palomar is Skywest Airlines, which offers seven flights a day, Brackett said. A second carrier, U.S. Airways, discounted its service in February. There's another airline using the facility ---- Vision Airways ---- but it only runs a few days a week.
"I think the market is there," Brackett said of having a second daily carrier. "We get complaints all the time that U.S. Air left."
Despite the limited commercial plane service, McClellan-Palomar continually hums with activity ----- small private planes and corporate jets continually take off and land. In fact, the airport is considered to be one of the nation's busiest single-runway airports. Records for June indicate that there were a total of 18,157 landings and takeoffs.
In the past, there's been discussion of extending the airport's runway to allow it to accommodate larger planes with bigger fuel loads, but that proposal isn't part of the latest construction work at the airport.
Any proposal to extend the runway would take five to 10 years to come to fruition because there are significant environmental issues to overcome, Brackett said. The airport is a former landfill and disturbing its surface would require an extensive environmental review, he said.
While airport officials say the runway extension is not their main focus now, Carlsbad's Chamber of Commerce has started surveying its 1,700 members to find out their thoughts on extending the runway.
It's important to find out what's on people's minds," chamber President and Chief Executive Officer Ted Owen said as he discussed the survey the chamber issued earlier this month.
He added that if the results are positive, the chamber may see what it can do to push for the runway extension in the years to come. Survey results are expected early next month, he said.
Contact staff writer Barbara Henry at (760) 901-4072 or bhenry@nctimes.com.
Correction: Airport survey information in error
The Carlsbad Chamber of Commerce survey results may be used if the chamber mounts a campaign to extend the runway at McClellan-Palomar Airport. However, the survey does not directly ask people if they support having a longer runway, a chamber official said Monday.
We apologize.
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Herb wrote on Jul 19, 2008 8:02 PM:So, my federal tax dollars are picking half the tab, and my San Diego County tax dollar are picking up the other half. Now don't that beat all - another reason for the County supervisors to get their resumes updated.
Paul wrote on Jul 19, 2008 8:37 PM:Good show. And then there's Oceanside.
learjetdoc wrote on Jul 19, 2008 9:27 PM:Having worked at Palomar Airport for the last 23 years, I have seen all of the great improvements to this money maker for Carlsbad, not to mention my continued employment. As a Carlsbad resident, I benefit as we all do from the improvements to our airport....sshhh, don't tell anybody. To folks who complain about jet noise: Noise is money!!! Don't like noise? Move somewhere else.
What wrote on Jul 20, 2008 9:17 AM:There's an airport in Carlsbad? How come I don't know about this?
Encinitan wrote on Jul 20, 2008 10:24 AM:"A second carrier, U.S. Airways, discounted its service in February."
I think the writer meant discontinued.
Mad as Hell wrote on Jul 20, 2008 11:30 AM:More commercial air service would be nice, but I don't think it will happen anytime soon.
Even though corporate jets (Lear, Gulfstream, etc.) land at Carlsbad every day, it is my understanding that commercial regional jets (Canadairs and Embraers) cannot land there because the runway is too short.
So that currently limits Carlsbad to turboprop commercial service....
United: The next closest United hub is San Francisco. The turboprops that fly from Carlsbad to LA have a range of just over 600 miles, so that remains a possibility.
American: They are retiring all of their American Eagle turboprops on the US mainland in the next three months, so turboprop service to LAX or San Jose is no longer a possibility.
Delta: There are some turboprops flying out of Salt Lake City, but these planes won't make it to Carlsbad on one tank.
Northwest and Continental: No hubs in the Western US.
USAirways: Turboprop service could one day resume to Phoenix, and they could also have service to their hub in Las Vegas. That airline is in pretty bad shape right now, and if one of the six major carriers is at risk of going under, it is this one.
Alaska Airlines also operates turboprops that can fly up to 1500 miles. But their turboprops seat about 70 people, and I don't think 70 people will want to fly to Portland or Seattle each day from Carlsbad.
Drinkwatters Folly wrote on Jul 20, 2008 2:49 PM:Yes, American Eagle is out of the question, U S Airway (America West) discontinued service and now the rumor is that United Express will pull out in September. I wouldn't worry about the crowds as it will be an empty 25 million boondoggle - with an elevator to a parking lot.
Capt Scott wrote on Aug 19, 2008 5:13 PM:I too have been employed at Carlsbad for several years, before that with major airlines at LAX,SAN and SNA. I think it is very important for the surrounding community to remember that this airport generates hugh amounts of tax revenue for the county/city. A key item to remember is the longer the runway, the quicker these jets will be in the air, which means lower noise levels. We need another commuter airline. More jobs = more tax revenues!
CRQ Airline Agent wrote on Aug 26, 2008 2:28 AM:First off, what Mad As Hell commented on is just about completely wrong with every airline he/she mentioned, I take it you dont know much about the aviation industry.
Second, Capt Scott commented on the whole situation perfectly!
A new terminal opens up greater possibilities to travelers and the airlines. As far as a longer runway goes, Palomar needs it in order to get some decent size airplanes in. Bigger the plane, bigger the selection of carriers/ destinations out of Carlsbad.
Plus beats driving down to SanDiego for 30-45 min depending on traffic, pay 9-20 dollars a day for parking, and than wait in long security lines. By the time you do all that, you are waiting at your gate in LAX, or in the air enroute to which ever new destinations are to come.
Carlsbad airport will benefit everyone, especially folks that live in the North county area.
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