Supervisors approve airport expansion report
Alicia Robinson
Airport officials will move forward with detailed design and
architectural plans for a new passenger terminal and other facility
expansions now that the Orange County Board of Supervisors has
approved an environmental report for the project.
The board on Tuesday approved the report, which was a supplement
to one approved in 2002 that addressed the effects of expanding the
airport. The supplemental report discussed logistics and short-term
effects of construction of the expansion.
“It’s a very necessary step, but a step within the final
[environmental report] that was approved back in 2002,” John Wayne
Airport spokesman Justin McCusker said. “The next step now would be
detailed architectural and engineering work.”
In May, the airport opened three new gates in a temporary terminal
to handle short commuter flights. A second temporary terminal is set
to open before Thanksgiving, and both will be removed in three to
five years when new permanent facilities are completed.
The construction of a permanent, three-level, 320,000-square-foot
terminal, expected to handle 35% of future airport traffic, will add
six gates, increasing the number of gates from 14 to 20. A
multi-level parking facility will add up to 3,200 parking spaces.
The expansion project also includes an extension on the north side
of the existing terminal to add passenger boarding and departure
areas, a third right-turn lane from Campus Drive to Bristol Street
and expansion or relocation of various airfield facilities.
Expansion will help the airport deal with increasing passenger
loads that followed the lifting of the cap, which went from 8.4
million passengers a year to 10.3 million passengers in 2003, and it
will increase in 2011 to 10.8 million passengers a year.
McCusker said he’s not sure when airport officials will seek bids
for architectural work, and it’s too early to place a time frame on
construction activities.
Supervisors unanimously approved the supplemental report.
“It’ll be good for the overall county,” Orange County Supervisor
Jim Silva said. “That means additional passengers can fly out of
Orange County.”
While he won’t have a part in any future negotiations on airport
capacity, Silva said he wants this construction to be the last.
“I will not be on the board if there’s any additional increases in
capacity, but I sure hope it is the end of it,” said Silva, whose
term on the board ends in 2007. “I don’t want to see any more
passengers at John Wayne.”
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