Marquette Sawyer Regional Airport | |||||||||||||
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USGS 2006orthophoto | |||||||||||||
| Summary | |||||||||||||
| Airport type | Public | ||||||||||||
| Owner | Marquette County | ||||||||||||
| Serves | Marquette, Michigan | ||||||||||||
| Location | Gwinn, Michigan | ||||||||||||
| Opened | 1999; 26 years ago (1999) | ||||||||||||
| Elevation AMSL | 1,204 ft / 367 m | ||||||||||||
| Coordinates | 46°21′13″N087°23′43″W / 46.35361°N 87.39528°W /46.35361; -87.39528 | ||||||||||||
| Website | www | ||||||||||||
| Map | |||||||||||||
| Runways | |||||||||||||
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| Statistics (12 months ending December 2024except where noted) | |||||||||||||
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| Sources:FAA,[1]MDOT[2] | |||||||||||||
Marquette Sawyer Regional Airport (IATA:MQT,ICAO:KSAW,FAALID:SAW) — previously namedSawyer International Airport — is a county-owned, public-use airport inMarquette County, Michigan, United States. It is located 17 nautical miles (20 mi; 31 km) south of the central business district of the city ofMarquette.[1] It is included in theFederal Aviation Administration (FAA)National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2021–2025, in which it iscategorized as a non-hub primary commercial service facility.[3]
This commercial andgeneral aviation airport is located nearGwinn, on a portion of the formerK. I. Sawyer Air Force Base, which closed in September 1995. The airport opened for passenger service in September 1999, serving Marquette and the surrounding area. It replaced the formerMarquette County Airport (IATA:MQT,ICAO:KMQT,FAALID:MQT), which closed the same year.
Although many U.S. airports use the same three-letterlocation identifier for theFAA andIATA, Marquette Sawyer Regional Airport is assignedSAW by the FAA andMQT by the IATA (which assignedSAW toSabiha Gökçen International Airport inIstanbul,Turkey).
The airport received $18 million from theUS Department of Transportation in 2020 as part of theCARES Act, which was intended to help mitigate the effects of theCOVID-19 pandemic[4][5] by providing funds earmarked for immediate spending to sustain operational expenses, generate loans, tax credits and paycheck protection to small businesses,[6] along with additionalprotections and benefits to individuals. The airport instead opted to use those funds for airport rebranding, consulting services, art installations, hangar renovations and fire suppression system upgrades, terminal expansion, demolition of multiple buildings not currently part of airport operations and other initiatives not related to COVID-19 impacts,[7][8][9][10][11] which will continue years after the end of the pandemic.
In 2022, the airport distributed a survey asking for public input in a rebranding effort. Despite public effort to include local native and renowned aeronautical engineerKelly Johnson's name in the rebranding,[12] the Marquette County Board of Commissioners instead voted to rename the airport to Marquette Sawyer Regional Airport on March 21, 2023, as part of the $20 million renovation and re-imaging initiatives.[13]
Marquette Sawyer Regional Airport covers an area of 2,100 acres (850 ha). It has a single asphalt/concrete runway, numbered 1 and 19, 9,072 by 150 feet (2,765 by 46 m),[1] originally re-designed in 1959 to accommodateB-52 bombers andKC-135 tankers. This airport is capable of handling aircraft as large as a Boeing 747-8 or a 777-200.
For the 12-month period ending December 31, 2022, the airport had 17,889 aircraft operations, an average of 49 per day: 56% general aviation, 35% air taxi, 1% scheduled commercial service and 8% military. In November 2023, there were 41 aircraft based at this airport: 36 single-engine, 4 multi-engine and 1 jet.[1]
There is an industrial park, the Telkite Technology Park,[14] adjacent to the airport, with 1,000 acres (400 ha) of land and 1,500,000 square feet (140,000 m2) of space in a Michigan Renaissance Zone, which exempts the tenant or owner from the majority of state and local taxes.
The airport is home to the Marquette County Aviation Wall of Honor, which features many influential pilots and engineers.[15]
In 2022, the airport received a $2.7 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation to repair hangars.[16]
The airport is undergoing significant renovation in 2023. $20 million in funds are being allocated toward the project which includes a new fire suppression system in an aircraft hangar, expansion of the terminal building, and newtaxiway asphalt. Theair traffic control tower will be upgraded in 2024, new aircraft parking spaces will be added, and there will be security upgrades to allow for larger commercial aircraft.[17]
Terminal upgrades will include an upgraded entrance and facility expansion as well as new art installations. The FAA will fund part of the project and will include money from the federal CARES Act from the Covid-19 pandemic. The airport is collecting final funds in order to begin the project.[18]
The airport has renovated a hangar to support airline operations.[19]
A number of unusable buildings will be torn down as part of the project.
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| American Eagle | Chicago–O'Hare[20] |
| Delta Connection | Detroit,Minneapolis/St. Paul[21] |
| Destinations map |
|---|
Destinations from Sawyer International Airport Red = Year-round destination Green = Seasonal destination Blue = Future destination |
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Ameriflight | Lansing |
| FedEx Feeder operated byCSA Air | Milwaukee |
| PACC Air | Appleton |
| Carrier | Passengers (arriving and departing) |
|---|---|
| Envoy Air | 50,090(52.17%) |
| SkyWest | 45,920(47.83%) |
| Rank | Airport | Passengers | Carriers |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chicago, IL (ORD) | 25,490 | American |
| 2 | Detroit, MI (DTW) | 15,630 | Delta |
| 3 | Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN (MSP) | 7,420 | Delta |