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Midland International Air and Space Port

Coordinates:31°56′33″N102°12′07″W / 31.94250°N 102.20194°W /31.94250; -102.20194
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American airport and spaceport in Texas

Midland International Air and Space Port
2006 USGS photo
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorCity of Midland
ServesMidland and Odessa, Texas
LocationMidland County, betweenMidland andOdessa,Texas, USA
Elevation AMSL2,871 ft / 875 m
Coordinates31°56′33″N102°12′07″W / 31.94250°N 102.20194°W /31.94250; -102.20194
Websitewww.FlyMAF.com
Map
Map
Runways
DirectionLengthSurface
ftm
04/224,6051,404Asphalt
10/288,3022,530Asphalt
16L/34R4,3391,323Asphalt
16R/34L9,5012,896Asphalt
Statistics (2021)
Aircraft operations (year ending 7/31/2021)58,010
Based aircraft106
Sources: airport website[1] andFAA[2]

Midland International Air and Space Port (IATA:MAF,ICAO:KMAF,FAALID:MAF) (formerlyMidland International Airport) is in the city limits ofMidland, Texas, United States,[3] about midway between Downtown Midland and DowntownOdessa, owned and operated by the City of Midland. In September 2014, it was licensed by theFederal Aviation Administration to serve commercial spaceflight.[4]

Overview

[edit]

The airport has four airlines, three serving hubs with regional jets and one flying mainline jets.Southwest Airlines is the largest carrier at the airport. In 2012, 497,193[5] passengers were enplaned.

History

[edit]

Origins

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The airport started asSloan Field, a small airport started in 1927 by Samuel Addison Sloan. Sloan leased 220 acres of flat grassland from Clarence Scharbauer, a rancher. Sam Sloan died in a plane crash in 1929,[6] and his brother, William Harvey Sloan, continued the operation. In 1939, Harvey Sloan sold the field to the City of Midland for $14,500.

As war clouds gathered over Europe in the late 1930s, Midland businessmen could foresee the possibility of a military base in West Texas and in 1940 they started promoting the airfield for use as a training base to the military establishment in Washington. The airfield was upgraded by theWorks Progress Administration with runway and taxiway improvements and lighting. Brigadier General G.C. Brant, Commander of the Gulf Coast Air Corps Training Center atRandolph Field, visited and reported that the situation at Midland was favorable. On June 13, 1941, it was announced that Midland would become a training base,Midland Army Air Field.

World War II

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Main article:Midland Army Airfield

Midland Army Air Field was home to the Army Air Forces Bombardier School, one of a dozenbombardier-training schools. It was one of the "West Texas Bombardier Quadrangle" schools of the Army Air Forces Training Command, along withChildress Army Airfield,San Angelo Army Airfield andBig Spring Army Airfield. The sole purpose of the Bombardier College was to train young men to use theNorden bombsight.

The first group of cadets, Class 42–6, arrived for training from Ellington, Texas, on February 6, 1942. Midland reached a peak base population of more than 4,000 and graduated a total of 6,627 bombardier officers by the conclusion of the training mission on January 1, 1946.

Postwar civil use

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The City of Midland annexed much of the land housing the airport on April 26, 1946, while a piece that became a part of a runway was annexed on February 25, 1964.[7]

Midland-Odessa Regional Airport opened its new passenger terminal in the early 1960s. It was served byContinental Airlines andTrans-Texas Airways (andAmerican Airlines, until 1963); the first jets were ContinentalBoeing 707s in 1965. The terminal had a scalloped roofline, allowing a column-free interior. All services (ticketing, baggage claim and concessions) were inside the building, and a single departure lounge opened onto the apron.

The late 1970s "oil boom" led to economic growth and more flights by incumbent airlines and new entrants likeSouthwest Airlines; American Airlines returned in June 1981, and America West arrived in 1987.

A new gate area was built along the apron with four second-level gates withjet bridges, concession space and escalator wells linking the addition to the existing terminal. The south end of the main terminal was extended with more ticketing space and the original terminal was modernized (the scalloped roofline was removed).

By the 1990s, several new-entrant carriers had pulled out and most of the rest had downgraded to regional jets; only Southwest, the airport's largest carrier, operated main line jets. The terminal building looked tired, and airport officials began planning a replacement. Construction began (in the infield parking lot) in 1996. The first half of the new terminal opened in early 1999 and the 1966 terminal was demolished. The second half of the new terminal was finished in late 1999. The first airplane built and flown in Texas, the "Pliska" (an approximate copy of the Wright Flyer II) was donated to the airport and is displayed in the terminal over the baggage-claim area.[8]

The Confederate Air Force (now theCommemorative Air Force) moved to Midland in 1991 and holds an annualairshow featuring itswarbird aircraft at the airport.[9][10]

In 2012, the Midland City Council amended a contract allowing three teams of experts – Midland International Airport, Parkhill, and Smith & Cooper – to prepare and submit a commercial space launch site application. On September 17, 2014, theFederal Aviation Administration formally approved the application, making Midland International Airport the first primary commercial service airport to be certified as a spaceport.[11] The original primary purpose of the launch site was to permitXCOR Aerospace to test its reusable winged commercial space vehicle,XCOR Lynx. The company relocated its headquarters[12] to the Midland International Airport from where it had planned to offer commercial space flights.[13] The XCOR research & development facility was planned to be located at the airport as part of a $10 million economic development incentive deal. However, as XCOR has since gone out of business, Midland Development Corp. is looking for other space companies to use the facilities.[14]

On April 22, 2024, Delta Airlines returned to Midland with three daily flights to Austin Bergstrom International Airport.

Facilities and aircraft

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Terminal in August 2013
Airport map

Midland International Air and Space Port covers 1,600acres (650 ha) at an elevation of 2,871 feet (875 m). It has four asphalt runways:[2][15]

  • 4/22: 4,605 ft × 75 ft (1,404 m × 23 m)
  • 10/28: 8,302 ft × 150 ft (2,530 m × 46 m)
  • 16L/34R: 4,339 ft × 100 ft (1,323 m × 30 m)
  • 16R/34L: 9,501 ft × 150 ft (2,896 m × 46 m)

For the 12-month period ending July 31, 2021, the airport had 58,010 aircraft operations, average 159 per day: 29% military, 39%general aviation, 10%air taxi and 22% airline. 106 aircraft were then based at the airport: 36 single-engine propeller, 37 multi-engine propeller, 30 jet and 3 helicopter.[2]

Airlines and destinations

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Passenger

[edit]
This sectionneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.(January 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
AirlinesDestinations
American EagleDallas/Fort Worth,Phoenix–Sky Harbor
Delta ConnectionAustin[16]
Southwest AirlinesAustin,[17]Dallas–Love,Denver,[18]Houston–Hobby,Las Vegas
United ExpressDenver,Houston–Intercontinental
Destinations map

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
Empire AirlinesLubbock

Statistics

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Top destinations

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Busiest domestic routes from MAF
(January 2024 – December 2024)[19]
RankCityPassengersCarriers
1Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas178,910American
2Houston–Intercontinental, Texas139,120United
3Houston–Hobby, Texas133,690Southwest
4Dallas-Love, Texas130,620Southwest
5Denver, Colorado66,080United, Southwest
6Austin, Texas53,110Delta, Southwest
7Las Vegas, Nevada37,330Southwest
8Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Arizona18,300American

Airline market share

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Airline market share
(January 2024 – December 2024)[19]
RankCarrierPassengersShare
1Southwest692,00045.88%
2SkyWest313,00020.74%
3Envoy302,00020.03%
4Mesa189,00012.56%
5United8,7900.58%
Other3,0400.20%

Accidents and incidents

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  • On November 26, 1983, a Texas Western AviationBeechcraft King Air crashed on final approach to MAF after initiating a go-around. The plane pitched up in an extremely nose high attitude, entered a left bank, stalled and crashed. All eight occupants (one crew, seven passengers) were killed. The cause was undetermined.[20]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Midland International Airport, official site
  2. ^abcFAA Airport Form 5010 for MAFPDF, effective November 28, 2024.
  3. ^"Zoning Map". City of Midland. RetrievedMay 12, 2019.
  4. ^Aviation Week & Space Technology, "Spaceflight Scheduling", September 22, 2014, p. 16
  5. ^"Preliminary CY 2012 Enplanements"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on September 3, 2013. RetrievedAugust 27, 2013.
  6. ^"History".
  7. ^"Annexations". City of Midland. RetrievedMay 12, 2019.
  8. ^"Midland International Airport". Archived fromthe original on January 28, 2013. RetrievedOctober 8, 2015. Midland International Airport website
  9. ^"Commemorative Air Force Moving Headquarters to Dallas". NBC.Associated Press. April 29, 2014. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2017.
  10. ^Jasper, Simone (August 27, 2016)."CAF High Sky Wing hosts 26th annual Midland AirSho".mrt.com. Hearst Newspapers. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2017.
  11. ^Basco, Joseph (September 17, 2014)."FAA approves spaceport license for Midland International".Midland Reporter-Telegram.
  12. ^"Xcor Aerospace and Midland Development Corporation Announce Establishment of Xcor's New Commercial Spaceflight R&D Center Headquarters". Archived fromthe original on August 18, 2013. RetrievedAugust 3, 2013.
  13. ^"Rocketship Tours". Archived fromthe original on July 15, 2011. RetrievedJanuary 10, 2011.
  14. ^Howes, Trevor (June 4, 2016)."Despite XCOR setback, space industry in Midland continues to grow".Midland Reporter-Telegram.
  15. ^"MAF airport data at skyvector.com".skyvector.com. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2022.
  16. ^"Delta's Texas Takeoff". RetrievedDecember 15, 2023.
  17. ^"Southwest Airlines Extends Flight Schedule Through April 24, 2022".Southwest Airlines. September 16, 2021. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2021.
  18. ^"Summer travel is right around the corner!". April 30, 2021.
  19. ^ab"Bureau of Transportation Statistics". RetrievedNovember 12, 2022.
  20. ^Accident description for N1910L at theAviation Safety Network. Retrieved on June 14, 2021.

External links

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