Jacksonville International Airport

Jacksonville International Airport (IATA: JAX, ICAO: KJAX, FAA LID: JAX) is a civil-military public airport 13 miles (21 km) north of Downtown Jacksonville, in Duval County, Florida.

It is owned and operated by the Jacksonville Aviation Authority.

Jacksonville International Airport
Jacksonville International Airport
Jacksonville International Airport
Summary
Airport typeMilitary/Public
Owner/OperatorJacksonville Aviation Authority
ServesJacksonville metropolitan area
Locationwithin Jacksonville city-county limits
OpenedSeptember 1, 1968
(55 years ago)
 (1968-09-01)
Elevation AMSL30 ft / 9 m
Coordinates30°29′39″N 081°41′16″W / 30.49417°N 81.68778°W / 30.49417; -81.68778
Websitehttp://www.flyjax.com
Maps
FAA airport diagram
FAA airport diagram
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
08/26 10,000 3,048 Concrete
14/32 7,701 2,347 Concrete
Statistics (2023/2024)
Aircraft operations (year ending 2/28/2023)99,616
Passengers (calendar year 2024)7,446,084
Based aircraft (2023)72
Sources: FAA, airport website

History

Construction started in 1965 on a new airport to handle travel to nearby naval bases. The new airport was dedicated on September 1, 1968, replacing Imeson Field. Terrain precluded lengthening the runways at Imeson, a necessity with the inception of commercial jet airliners. A new idea at JIA was separating departing and arriving passengers on different sides of the terminal (as can be seen in the photo on this page). This is no longer the case, and the airport (which has greatly expanded since the picture was taken) now uses the more typical layout with departing passengers on an upper level with an elevated roadway, and arriving passengers on the lower level.

The new airport was slow to expand, only serving two million passengers a year by 1982, but it served over five million annually by 1999 and an expansion plan was approved in 2000. The first phase, which included rebuilding the landside terminal, the central square and main concessions area, as well as consolidating the security checkpoints at one location, and more parking capacity was completed in 2004–2005. In 2007, 6,319,016 passengers were processed.

Jacksonville International Airport 
Jacksonville International Airport Concourse C

The second phase of the expansion program was carried out over three years, commencing in mid-2006 and projected to cost about $170 million. Concourses A and C were completely rebuilt; the former concourses have been demolished. Work on Concourse B was given a low priority because the capacities of the rebuilt Concourses A and C were more than adequate for existing demand. The expansion was designed by Reynolds, Smith & Hills (RS&H).

The economic downturn of 2009 caused a decrease in passengers and flights. This led the JAA to commence the demolition of Concourse B in June 2009 because it was safer and easier for the contractor. After the debris was removed, asphalt was laid to provide space for ground equipment parking. The concourse will be rebuilt when passenger traffic increases, which the JAA had originally projected would occur in 2013 but did not materialize. A section of the old concourse eventually became part of an airline club lounge which opened in 2019.

Expansion

In 2018, the airport handled 6,460,253 passengers, breaking the previous record set in 2007. 7,186,639 passengers were handled in 2019. This increase in traffic prompted the JAA to revive the plan to rebuild concourse B. The new concourse could open as early as 2022, providing six additional gates and could be expanded later with six more. The design of concourses A and C also allow them to be extended to accommodate additional gates. In 2019, RS&H and Jacobs Engineering were chosen to perform the design, while Balfour Beatty was selected as the construction manager for the concourse B project. However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic the terminal B expansion project was put on hold again. By 2022 traffic recovered to over 6.5 million passengers annually and the expansion project was restarted, with construction on concourse B expected to commence in summer 2023.

Operations

Facilities

The airport covers 7,911 acres (3,201 ha) and has two concrete runways: 08/26, 10,000 x 150 ft (3,048 x 46 m) and 14/32, 7,701 x 150 ft (2,347 x 46 m). The terminal at JIA is composed of a baggage claim area, on the first floor and a ticketing area on the second floor, at the front of the structure. Past baggage claim and ticketing is the mezzanine, where shops, restaurants and the security checkpoint are located. Beyond the mezzanine are the airport's Concourses A and C, which include 10 gates each (for a total of 20), along with other shops and restaurants.

The airport also has a Delta Sky Club on Concourse A and a multi-airline passenger club located behind the airside food court.

There are three galleries located off of the main courtyard before the security checkpoint. One features an art exhibit, the second houses a revolving exhibit about a Jacksonville-area landmark or institution, and the third houses a permanent exhibit highlighting the history of aviation in the region.

The airport's two runways form a "V" pattern (with the tip of the "V" pointing west). A plan exists to build two more runways, each paralleling one existing runway. The one alongside the existing southern runway will be built first. No date has been set.

In the year ending February 28, 2023, the airport had 99,616 aircraft operations, an average of 273 per day: 63% scheduled commercial, 19% general aviation, 14% air taxi and 4% military. In February 2023, there were 72 aircraft based at this airport: 3 single-engine, 3 multi-engine, 46 jet and 20 military.

Military facilities

Jacksonville International Airport 
Jacksonville International Airport 

Concurrent with the closure of Imeson Airport, the 125th Fighter-Interceptor Group (125 FIG) of the Florida Air National Guard (FANG) relocated to Jacksonville International Airport. Military Construction (MILCON) funds provided for the establishment of Jacksonville Air National Guard Base in the southwest quadrant of the airport and placement of USAF-style emergency arresting gear on the JAX runways. Upgraded from group to wing status and redesignated as the 125th Fighter Wing (125 FW) in the early 1990s, the wing is the host unit for Jacksonville ANGB and operates F-15C and F-15D Eagle aircraft. The 125 FW is operationally-gained by the Air Combat Command (ACC).

Jacksonville ANGB is basically a small air force base, albeit without the military housing, military hospital or other infrastructure of major U.S. Air Force installations. The Air National Guard provides a fully equipped USAF Crash Fire Rescue station to augment the airport's own fire department for both on-airport structural fires and aircraft rescue and firefighting (ARFF) purposes. The base employs approximately 300 full-time military personnel (ART and AGR) and 1,000 part-time military personnel who are traditional air national guardsmen.

Jacksonville International Airport 
Jacksonville International Airport Gate A3

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinationsRefs
Allegiant Air Cincinnati, Harrisburg (begins June 14, 2024), Indianapolis, Knoxville (begins June 14, 2024), Nashville, Pittsburgh, Washington–Dulles
Seasonal: Belleville/St. Louis, Columbus–Rickenbacker, Flint, Grand Rapids, Norfolk
American Airlines Charlotte, Chicago–O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Miami, Philadelphia, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Washington–National
American Eagle Charlotte, Chicago–O'Hare, Miami, Philadelphia, Washington–National
Breeze Airways Hartford, Las Vegas, New Orleans, Norfolk, Providence
Seasonal: Columbus–Glenn, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Raleigh/Durham, Richmond, San Diego (begins May 1, 2024), White Plains (resumes June 22, 2024)
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, Boston, Detroit, Minneapolis/St. Paul
Delta Connection Boston, New York–JFK, New York–LaGuardia
Frontier Airlines Cleveland (begins May 22, 2024), Dallas/Fort Worth, Philadelphia, San Juan
Seasonal: Denver
JetBlue Boston, Fort Lauderdale, New York–JFK
Southwest Airlines Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago–Midway, Denver, Houston–Hobby, Nashville, St. Louis
Seasonal: Austin, Dallas–Love, Washington–National
Sun Country Airlines Seasonal: Minneapolis/St. Paul
United Airlines Chicago–O'Hare, Denver, Houston–Intercontinental, Newark, Washington–Dulles
United Express Chicago–O'Hare, Denver, Houston–Intercontinental, Newark, Washington–Dulles

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
FedEx Express Fort Lauderdale, Greensboro, Indianapolis, Memphis, Tampa
UPS Airlines Albany (GA), Louisville, Miami, San Juan

Statistics

Passenger traffic

The 2023 fiscal year (10/1/2022-9/30/2023) set a record for passenger numbers at Jacksonville International Airport. handling 7,306,171 passengers, which was a 14.4% increase from the prior fiscal year.

Top destinations

Busiest domestic routes from JAX (January 2023 – December 2023)
Rank City Passengers Carriers
1 Jacksonville International Airport  Atlanta, Georgia 711,000 Delta, Southwest
2 Jacksonville International Airport  Charlotte, North Carolina 319,000 American
3 Jacksonville International Airport  Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas 256,000 American
4 Jacksonville International Airport  Baltimore, Maryland 181,000 Southwest
5 Jacksonville International Airport  New York–JFK, New York 178,000 Delta, JetBlue
6 Jacksonville International Airport  Newark, New Jersey 156,000 United
7 Jacksonville International Airport  Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois 146,000 American, United
8 Jacksonville International Airport  New York–LaGuardia, New York 146,000 Delta, JetBlue
9 Jacksonville International Airport  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 143,000 American, Frontier
10 Jacksonville International Airport  Miami, Florida 134,000 American

Airline market share

Largest airlines at JAX
(November 2022 – October 2023)
Rank Airline Passengers Share
1 American Airlines 1,663,000 23.35%
2 Delta Air Lines 1,601,000 22.48%
3 Southwest Airlines 1,094,000 15.36%
4 United Airlines 785,000 11.02%
5 JetBlue Airways 608,000 8.54%
Other 1,372,000 19.26%

Ground transportation

Jacksonville International Airport has direct public transit service to Jacksonville Transportation Authority's bus network. The Route 1 bus connects the airport to downtown Jacksonville, with connections to Greyhound Bus Lines and to the Jacksonville Skyway monorail system.

Accidents and incidents

On October 4, 1971, George M. Giffe Jr. hijacked a plane in Nashville, Tennessee, then forced the pilot to fly to Jacksonville, where Giffe killed his wife, the pilot and himself when cornered by the FBI.

On December 6, 1984, Provincetown-Boston Airlines Flight 1039 crashed on takeoff, killing 11 passengers and 2 crew on board. The debris from the Tampa-bound flight burned near Lem Turner Road. The 1986 National Transportation Safety Board report cited elevator trim control system failure, causing separation of the horizontal stabilizer.

See also

References

Tags:

Jacksonville International Airport HistoryJacksonville International Airport ExpansionJacksonville International Airport OperationsJacksonville International Airport Airlines and destinationsJacksonville International Airport StatisticsJacksonville International Airport Ground transportationJacksonville International Airport Accidents and incidentsJacksonville International Airport

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