LA/ONTARIO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT


The terminal at ONT

'LA/Ontario International Airport' , (previously, just Ontario International Airport) is a public airport located two miles (3 km) east of the central business district (CBD) of Ontario, a city in San Bernardino County, California, USA.

Contents
Early history
Present-day operations
Noise Restrictions
Terminals, airlines and destinations
Terminal 2
Terminal 4
International Terminal
Popular culture
References
External links

Early history


The airport was originally built by one of the first flying clubs in southern California, The Friends of Ontario Airport, and dates back to 1923, when a landing field was established east of Central Avenue (three miles west of the current airport) on land leased from the Union Pacific Railroad. The airfield was named Latimer Field in honor of an orange-packing company located next to the airstrip. In 1929 the city of Ontario purchased a 30-acre tract in the southwest corner of the present airport for $12,000 and established the Ontario Municipal Airport.
In 1941 the city purchased surrounding the airport and approved construction of new runways, which were completed by 1942. On February 27, an Army Air Corps plane made the first landing. By 1943, during World War II, the airport was earmarked as an Army Air Corps P-38 training base and P-59 operating base.
In 1946, Ontario Municipal Airport was renamed "Ontario International Airport" because of transpacific cargo flights originating from the facility.
In 1980, a new east-to-west runway, 26L/8R, was built, replacing the old northeast-to-southwest runway, 4/22. Remnants of the runway are still seen in taxiways.

Present-day operations


The airport covers 1,700 acres (6.9 km²) and has two runways. It is the second major international airport in the area after Los Angeles International Airport (LAX). LA/Ontario International Airport is typically less crowded than LAX; according to ''Forbes.com'' it is one of the five best alternate airports in America. It is the only major commercial airport to serve the fast growing Inland Empire region of California, is the West Coast air and truck hub for UPS and is a major distribution point for FedEx. LA/Ontario International Airport also serves as a hub for the independent operations of ExpressJet Airlines, which began service to 14 destinations in April 2007.
Thanks to Ontario's long runways (runway 8L/26R is longer than any of those at LAX), it is often used as an alternate landing site for large aircraft when LAX is inaccessible due to weather conditions or other reasons. It is a particularly important alternate airport since there are many trans-Pacific flights headed to LAX which may not have enough fuel left after the long journey to reach other major airports. However, due to Ontario's relatively small customs facilities and limited options for connecting flights, such re-routed flights typically do not disembark passengers in Ontario. Instead, the airport is usually used to re-fuel the aircraft, which then take off again for a short flight to LAX once landing conditions there have improved.
The airport is located approximately 38 miles (61 km) east of Downtown Los Angeles. Drivers can either use the San Bernardino Freeway, Ontario Freeway, or the Pomona Freeway to access the airport. It is also served by local buses and by private shuttles, though most passengers drive or are picked up at the airport.
Ontario was the only Los Angeles-area airport to host the Concorde supersonic aircraft as it made its promotional around the world flights.
By the end of 2006 Ontario International Airport was renamed to 'LA/Ontario International Airport' in order to entice travelers from the already over-trafficked Los Angeles International Airport and also to reduce confusion with Ontario, Canada.
Runway layout at ONT

Noise Restrictions


LA/Ontario has few noise restrictions/abatement rules unlike other Southern California airports such as John Wayne Airport, Bob Hope Airport, and Long Beach Airport which all have very strict policies. The airport is allowed to operate 24/7 but during the hours of 10pm through 7am all aircraft must arrive from the east on runway 26L and take-off to the east on runway 8L unless the weather has heavy winds blowing in the opposite direction or there is construction occurring that results in one runway not being able to be used. All aircraft must also depart from the very ends of the runway allowing aircraft to fly higher over neighborhoods.

Terminals, airlines and destinations


LA/Ontario International Airport has three terminals. The terminal numbering scheme is designed to accommodate future growth. The airport's master plan calls for five terminals to be spaced adjacent to and in between the existing Terminals 2 and 4. The "international terminal" (which is a really a small building designed primarily to segregate arriving international passengers to clear customs) would be razed and be part of the new Terminal 1. One terminal would be dedicated exclusively to Southwest Airlines and the other to United Airlines, while the other airlines would share the remaining terminals.
The old Ontario Airport had two terminals: the main terminal and a small terminal for Delta Air Lines and SkyWest. The old terminals are west of the current terminals and are visible when landing. The old flight control tower is still used as an auxiliary tower. The previous design was of the traditional walk-up type with only one jetway gate; the new terminals use the more modern jetway system. The old terminals are currently used to shoot airport scenes in movies and on television. They were used as an interior stand-in for the Los Angeles airport on the ''LAX'' TV series, and used for a key plot development on the fifth season of the series ''24''. The interior and exterior of Terminal 1 and the adjacent parking lot were used to portray a 1960s version of Miami International Airport in ''Catch Me If You Can''. Other film productions utilizing the original airport buildings and locations include ''The Best Years of Our Lives'' (1946), ''Back Street'' (1961), ''The Counterfeit Killer'' (1968), and ''Zodiac'' (2007). The old terminals will be torn down when the new Terminal 1 is constructed.
There is discounted parking located outside the old terminal and at a remote location on the west end of the airport. On the east end, a ground transportation center is provided that consolidates all the rental car companies serving the airport in one central location. A circulator bus circles the airport and provides connections to each of the other terminals, rental car and remote parking lots, and the public transit stops.
General aviation is located at the south side of the airport, although most general aviation pilots tend to use a number of nearby airports: Redlands Airport, Chino Airport, Cable Airport in Upland, or Rialto Municipal Airport.
Terminal 2

Terminal 2 has 265,000 square feet (25,000 m²) and 12 gates (201 - 212). The following airlines serve from this terminal:

Aeroméxico Gates 208, 209 (Aguascalientes, Guadalajara, León, Mexico City) [departures only]

Alaska Airlines Gates 205, 206 (Seattle/Tacoma)


Horizon Air (Portland (OR))

Continental Airlines Gate 207 (Houston-Intercontinental)

Delta Air Lines Gates 210 - 212 (Atlanta, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, Salt Lake City)


Delta Connection operated by SkyWest (Salt Lake City)


★ Delta Connection operated by ExpressJet Airlines (Salt Lake City)

ExpressJet Airlines Gates 208 - 210 (Albuquerque, Austin, Boise, Colorado Springs, El Paso, Fresno, Kansas City, Monterey, Oklahoma City, Omaha, San Antonio, Spokane, Tucson, Tulsa)

JetBlue Airways Gate 204 (New York-JFK)

United Airlines Gates 201 - 203


United Express operated by SkyWest (Los Angeles, San Francisco)


Ted operated by United Airlines (Denver)
Terminal 4

Terminal 4 has 265,000 square feet (25,000 m²) and 12 gates (401 - 412). The following airlines serve from this terminal:

American Airlines Gate 410 (Dallas/Fort Worth)

ATA Airlines Gate 408 (Chicago-Midway, Honolulu)

Líneas Aéreas Azteca Gates 208, 209 (Guadalajara, Mexico City) [Currently Suspended]

Southwest Airlines Gates 401 - 403, 405 - 408 (Las Vegas, Nashville, Oakland, Phoenix, Sacramento, San Jose (CA))

US Airways Gates 411, 412


★ US Airways operated by America West Airlines (Las Vegas, Phoenix)


US Airways Express operated by Mesa Airlines (Las Vegas, Phoenix)
International Terminal

The International terminal has 2 gates and serves the following airlines:

Aeroméxico (Aguascalientes, Guadalajara, León, Mexico City) [arrivals only]

Líneas Aéreas Azteca (Guadalajara, Mexico City) [Currently Suspended]

Popular culture



★ In 1946, an airplane "graveyard" located at the airport, containing surplus and retired aircraft from the recent war, was used for a memorable scene in the Samuel Goldwyn film ''The Best Years of Our Lives'', starring Myrna Loy, Fredric March and Dana Andrews.

★ In 1961, the exterior terminal building portrayed "Lincoln Airport" in the film ''Back Street'' starring Susan Hayward and John Gavin.

★ In 1968, the airport's terminal was seen in the film ''The Counterfeit Killer'' starring Jack Lord and Shirley Knight.

★ The interior and exterior of Terminal 1 and the adjacent parking lot were used to portray Miami International Airport in the 2002 film ''Catch Me If You Can''.

★ The interior and exterior of Terminal 1 and the adjacent parking lot were used in the 2003 film ''Confidence''.

★ The airport was used in Kanye West's 2004 music video ''All Falls Down''.

★ The airport was used as a stand-in for Chicago's O'Hare International Airport in the 2004 film ''Meet the Fockers''.

★ Ontario International Airport was used in the 2005 film ''Red Eye''.

★ In January 2006, LA/Ontario Airport was featured, by name, in Season 5 of the television drama series ''24'', in which terrorists took control of the airport (then known as Ontario Airport) and took several hostages.

★ LA/Ontario Airport was featured in a 2006 commercial for Hyundai's Santa Fe SUV.

★ The airport was featured in the final scenes of the 2007 film ''Zodiac''.

★ The airport's interior was used in a 2007 Jack in the Box breakfast commercial.

References





Ontario International Airport (official site)

Ontario International Airport Master Plan

External links





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