[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/

OKC Will Rogers International Airport

(Redirected from Will Rogers World Airport)

OKC Will Rogers International Airport[2] (IATA: OKC, ICAO: KOKC, FAA LID: OKC), also known as Will Rogers Airport or simply Will Rogers, is a passenger airport located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States, about 6 miles (10 km) southwest of the city's downtown area. It is a civil-military airport on 8,081 acres (12.63 sq mi) of land.[3][4] Although the official IATA and ICAO airport codes for OKC Will Rogers International Airport are OKC and KOKC, it is common practice to refer to it as "WRWA" or "Will Rogers".

OKC Will Rogers International Airport
2006 USGS orthophoto
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerOklahoma City Department of Airports
OperatorOklahoma City Airport Trust
ServesOklahoma City metropolitan area
LocationOklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S.
Elevation AMSL1,296 ft / 395 m
Coordinates35°23′35″N 097°36′03″W / 35.39306°N 97.60083°W / 35.39306; -97.60083
Websiteflyokc.com
Maps
FAA airport diagram
FAA airport diagram
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
13/31 7,800 2,377 Asphalt/concrete
17L/35R 9,802 2,988 Concrete
17R/35L 9,800 2,987 Concrete
18/36 3,078 938 Asphalt
Statistics (2023)
Total passengers4,400,049
Aircraft operations96,535
Total cargo (lbs.)56,577,353
Source: Will Rogers World Airport[1]

The airport is named for comedian and legendary cowboy Will Rogers, an Oklahoma native who died in an airplane crash near Utqiagvik, Alaska in 1935;[5] The city's other major airport, Wiley Post Airport, along with the Wiley Post–Will Rogers Memorial Airport in Utqiagvik, are named for Wiley Post, who also died in the same crash. The airport was the only airport to use "World" in its designation. Although Will Rogers offers U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) services for customs and immigration, there are currently no scheduled international flights.

OKC Will Rogers International Airport is the busiest commercial airport in the state of Oklahoma. In 2019, the airport handled nearly 4.42 million passengers, marking the busiest year on record three years in a row.[6] Southwest Airlines carries the most passengers at OKC Will Rogers International Airport, with a market share of nearly 48% as of April 2022.[7]

History

edit

The airport first opened in 1911 as Oklahoma City Municipal Airfield. It was renamed in Rogers' honor in 1941.[8]

 
World War II postcard from Will Rogers Army Airfield

During World War II, Will Rogers Field was a major training facility for the United States Army Air Forces; many fighter and bomber units were activated and received initial training there.

Army Air Forces groups known to have been stationed at Will Rogers Field include:

After completion of their initial training, these units were reassigned to other airfields for secondary training before deployment overseas.

Postwar

edit
 
Bell P-39 Airacobra at Will Rogers Field, 1944

The December 1951 C&GS chart showed four runways: the 5497-ft runway 3, 3801-ft runway 8, 5652-ft runway 12 and 5100-ft runway 17.

The April 1957 OAG showed 21 daily nonstop departures on Braniff International Airways, 15 on American Airlines, five on Central Airlines, four on Continental Airlines and three on TWA. A TWA Constellation aircraft flew non-stop from Oklahoma City to Los Angeles, but eastward non-stops didn't reach beyond Wichita, Kansas, Tulsa or Dallas, Texas. Oklahoma City began non-stop flights to Chicago starting in 1966.

2000–present

edit

Great Plains Airlines, a regional airline based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, made Will Rogers World Airport a hub in 2001 with non-stop flights to Tulsa, Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Colorado Springs, Colorado and direct or connecting flights to Nashville, Tennessee, St. Louis, Chicago, and Washington. The airline had hoped to reach additional East- and West-Coast markets but declared bankruptcy and ceased operations on January 23, 2004.

On May 31, 2013, an EF-1 tornado hit Will Rogers Airport. The 1.4-mile wide tornado traveled 10.4 miles, including across the northern side of the airport. The path of the tornado passed over the facilities of MetroTech, the FAA, the Oklahoma National Guard, AAR, the Four Points Hotel, and the passenger terminal and hangars on the north and east side of the airport. Minor damage was reported at AAR and other buildings in this path.[9] The Parking Spot location north of the airport on Meridian Avenue was also hit by the tornado. The company decided in August 2013 not to re-open the facility and exit the OKC market.[10]

The airport once partnered with Tinker AFB in presenting Aerospace America airshow.[11]

On August 27, 2024, the city council of Oklahoma City approved a name change for the airport proposed by the OKC Airport Trust, officially changing the airport's name from "Will Rogers World Airport" to "OKC Will Rogers International Airport".[2] The Trust attributed the name and logo change to a desire to market the airport to a wider audience.[12]

Terminal

edit

In the late 1990s, the Oklahoma City Airport Trust deemed the 1967-built terminal building unsuitable. Following the adoption of a three-phase master plan, preparations for renovating the airport were launched in 2001. The old twin concourses (visible in the 1995 photograph) were demolished to make way for a larger terminal with integrated concourses, high ceilings, and modern facilities.

 
WRWA East Concourse, with a Shuttle by United Boeing 737-500 aircraft

A $110 million multi-phase expansion and renovation project, designed by Atkins Benham Inc. and Gensler and built by Oscar J. Boldt Construction Company,[13] began in 2001.[14] Phase I involved erection of construction walkways from the five-story parking garage to the terminal building, demolishing the terminal's existing elevator core, construction of new elevator and escalator cores on the tunnel level and on level one, building temporary entrance and exit ramps for vehicles approaching and leaving the terminal, reconstruction of the roofs of the lower level and level one, finishing the elevator and escalator cores to level two, building new permanent entry and exit ramps for vehicles, and construction of a new transportation plaza and driving lanes.[14] Phase II included a new concourse constructed to the west of the central terminal area, which was renovated to match the interior and exterior designs of the new concourse. The 1960s-built concourses were then demolished after the new concourse opened in 2005. The entire phase was completed in November 2006.[14] Phase III project calls for the construction of a new concourse to the east, with at least eight more gates as well as expanded retail, restaurant, and baggage areas.

Will Rogers World Airport has a single three-level terminal with 17 departure gates along the West Concourse (Gates 1–12), Central Concourse (Gates 14–24) East Concourse (Gates 26-32). Gate 32 is soon to be used for international flights. Gates on the south side use even numbers while those on the north use odd. Due to the terminal's layout, certain odd numbers are omitted in the succession of Gates 1 through 32. Arriving passengers can access baggage claim in the downstairs level where there are 9 baggage belts. Level 3 contains offices for airline and airport staff.

The architecture of the current terminal uses native stone along with loft-ceilings, plate glass and brushed metal. Compared to the original terminal design of the old Concourses A and B, today's terminal provides a more open feel similar to that found in larger hub airports.

Terminal expansion

edit

In 2008, Will Rogers World Airport officials approved a contract with Frankfurt Short Bruza Associates to begin planning for expansion.[15] Officials later agreed to postpone the expansion plan due to the industry-wide decline in passenger traffic caused by the Great Recession.

During 2012, the Phase III expansion plan was updated to include a new Central Concourse reconfiguration plan. In 2014, the Airport Trust selected Option 2a, which includes only the central terminal improvements. The $3.6 million project will create a new central checkpoint in the center of the check-in hall. Two new greeter lobbies will be created where existing check points exist. The expansion will slightly reduce the space utilized by Sonic in the food court. The restrooms in the area will also be relocated to the nearby Osage room. The Southwest ticket counters will be relocated further east.[16]

In 2015, the airport trust agreed to proceed with the full construction of the East Concourse[17] due to increased congestion in the existing West and Central concourses and passenger demand. When completed, the existing terminal building would to the east and include a new passenger concourse initially with four gates, which would increase the number of boarding gates to 21. The new facility will have customs and immigration on the lower level accessed by the two easternmost gates and would serve international arrivals. The expansion will incorporate a single TSA screening zone in the center of the existing terminal, the food court will be removed and two reconstructed, and arriving passengers would exit at the current TSA zones, which will be dramatically downsized into modern "meeter-greeter areas". The East expansion will include onsite USAA military welcoming facilities, expanded concessions and office space, and an updated terminal lobby.

The new concourse expansion project will also include an innovative view system composed of an elevated platform and lounge that will allow visitors to walk above the newly expanded East Concourse and view down onto the secure gate areas and out to the airside. Visitors would enter the elevated walkway at the terminal lobby non-secured side. This design is intended to provide visitors the experience of airports of old; where one could walk all the way to the gate – albeit today completely separated from the secured concourse space. The expansion broke ground in March 2019 and opened in September 2021.[18][non-primary source needed][19]

If necessary, a final expansion of the existing master plan could be accomplished with construction of the Central Concourse, increasing gate capacity by an additional 10 gates. This would give the terminal a final configuration with three concourses, East, West, and Central, and would provide the airport with 30+ gates.[citation needed]

Airlines and destinations

edit

Passenger

edit
AirlinesDestinationsRefs
Alaska Airlines Seattle/Tacoma [20]
Allegiant Air Seasonal: Destin/Fort Walton Beach, Las Vegas, Orlando/Sanford [21]
American Airlines Charlotte, Dallas/Fort Worth
Seasonal: Washington–National
[22]
American Eagle Charlotte, Chicago–O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Los Angeles, Miami, New York–LaGuardia, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Washington–National [22]
Delta Air Lines Atlanta [23]
Delta Connection Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York–LaGuardia,[24] Salt Lake City [23]
Frontier Airlines Denver, Las Vegas, Orlando (begins March 7, 2025)[25] [26]
Southwest Airlines Atlanta (ends April 7, 2025),[27] Austin, Chicago–Midway, Denver, Houston–Hobby, Las Vegas, Nashville, Orlando, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, San Antonio, St. Louis, Washington–National [28]
United Express Chicago–O'Hare, Denver, Houston–Intercontinental [29]
Destinations map

Cargo

edit
AirlinesDestinations
FedEx Express Billings, Boise, El Paso, Fort Worth/Alliance, Los Angeles, Memphis, Oakland, Tulsa
Martinaire Tulsa
UPS Airlines Louisville, Sioux Falls, Tulsa

Statistics

edit

Top destinations

edit
Busiest domestic routes from OKC (June 2023 – May 2024)[7]
Rank City Passengers Airline
1 Texas  Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas 311,000 American
2 Colorado  Denver, Colorado 302,000 Frontier, Southwest, United
3 Georgia (U.S. state)  Atlanta, Georgia 228,000 Delta, Southwest
4 Texas  Houston–Hobby, Texas 152,000 Southwest
5 Arizona  Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Arizona 143,000 American, Southwest
6 Texas  Houston–Intercontinental, Texas 134,000 United
7 Nevada  Las Vegas, Nevada 131,000 Allegiant, Southwest, Frontier
8 Illinois  Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois 110,000 American, United
9 North Carolina  Charlotte, North Carolina 90,000 American
10 Missouri  St. Louis, Missouri 81,000 Southwest
Largest airlines at OKC
(June 2023 – May 2024)[7]
Rank Airline Passengers Share
1 Southwest Airlines 1,647,000 37.76%
2 SkyWest Airlines 719,000 16.48%
3 American Airlines 686,000 15.73%
4 Delta Air Lines 387,000 8.88%
5 Mesa Airlines 236,000 5.41%
Other airlines 687,000 15.75%

Annual traffic

edit
Annual passenger traffic at OKC airport. See Wikidata query.
Annual passenger traffic at OKC (enplaned + deplaned)[30]
Year Passengers Year Passengers Year Passengers
1999 3,470,824 2009 3,384,671 2019 4,419,119
2000 3,481,789 2010 3,466,127 2020 1,952,157
2001 3,321,695 2011 3,561,605 2021 3,336,919
2002 3,193,753 2012 3,683,051 2022 3,950,806
2003 3,260,114 2013 3,657,467 2023 4,400,049
2004 3,379,883 2014 3,834,009 2024
2005 3,575,664 2015 3,721,525 2025
2006 3,612,889 2016 3,715,374 2026
2007 3,737,135 2017 3,925,358 2027
2008 3,715,593 2018 4,341,159 2028

Ground transportation

edit

Rental car

edit

The airport opened a new Consolidated Rental Car Facility in early 2016, moving all rental services away from the Terminal to a grand facility nearby. Advantage, Alamo, Avis, Budget, Dollar, Enterprise, Hertz, National, and Thrifty rental companies[31] offer service at Will Rogers World Airport. Shuttle buses connect passengers from the arrivals plaza just outside the terminal.

Parking

edit

The airport began a $3.8 million maintenance project in September 2011 to rehabilitate and repair two of its three parking garages. The project will make improvements to garages A and B, two of the six parking options at the airport. Garage A is the two-story garage that provides hourly parking for the airport's short-term visitors on the upper level, and "ready-return" spaces for the rental car agencies on the lower level. Parking Garage B, adjacent to A, is the older of the two five-level parking structures that provide covered parking for air travelers. Garage C, the new parking garage that opened in 2009, will not be impacted. Nearing middle age (Garage A is 44 years old and Garage B is 31 years old), the structures will undergo several different types of refurbishments that will extend the long-term use of the facilities. The work will include:

  • Repair of concrete walls and pillars, specifically where there are cracks or spalling (chips of concrete that have broken off) and other deterioration
  • Replacement or repair of exterior stairs
  • Replacement and upgrade of all lighting circuits
  • Replacement and upgrade of all lighting fixtures
  • The top levels of each garage will receive new expansion joints, membrane coating, waterproofing and protectant to prevent leaking.

The project will be divided into 12 sequences, allowing the airport to keep as much of the garage open as possible. Most of the sequences will only require closing about 300 spaces at a time, leaving approximately 2,500 of the 2,800 total spaces in the two garages available for parking. The project work will start in the five-level Garage B on levels one and two. The entire project is anticipated to take 18 months. The most challenging portion of the project will be when the work commences on the two-story parking garage. During this sequencing, hourly parking and rental car companies will be moved to temporary locations in Garage B and C.[32]

The airport operates three surface parking lots on the grounds of WRWA.[33]

  • Lot No. 1 is a long-term remote shuttle lot located on Amelia Earhart Drive.
  • Lot No. 2 is a long-term shuttle lot located directly adjacent to the parking garages on the north side.
  • Lot No. 3 is a long-term canopy shuttle lot that provides shelter from sun and hail with protective canopies. It is located to the west of the parking garages on 67th Street near the control tower.

The airport provides a short-term parking area in the second (top) level of Garage A. The parking is free for the first hour and then $2 per hour after that. There are also two cell phone waiting areas just across the street from the shuttle parking lot No. 2, near Lot No. 3, and by the flag plaza north of the long-term shuttle Lot No. 2.

Government and military operations

edit

Will Rogers Air National Guard Base

edit

Until 2008, the Oklahoma Air National Guard's 137th Airlift Wing (137 AW) and its Lockheed C-130 Hercules aircraft were located at the airport's Will Rogers Air National Guard Base. As part of the 2005 round of Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) recommendations, the majority of the maintenance unit (excluding the munitions flight) was relocated to nearby Tinker Air Force Base, where the wing transitioned to the Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft and became the 137th Air Refueling Wing (137 ARW), an "Associate" unit of the 507th Air Refueling Wing (507 ARW).[34] The unit then shared KC-135 aircraft with the Air Force Reserve Command's 507th Air Refueling Wing in a joint operations and maintenance program. On 30 Jun 2015, the 137 ARW / 507 ARW partnership at Tinker AFB officially ended. The 137th was transferred to Air Force Special Operations Command and redesignated as the 137th Special Operations Wing (137 SOW), flying the Beechcraft MC-12 Liberty, marking a return of ANG flight operations to Will Rogers.[35][36]

The MC-12 Liberty Formal Training Unit (FTU) will be replaced by the L3Harris OA-1K FTU.[37]

Will Rogers Air National Guard Base also continues to be the home of the unit's Expeditionary Support Group headquarters, operations and support, as well as the Oklahoma ANG's 146th Air Support Operations Squadron.[38] The Oklahoma Army National Guard also carries out helicopter maintenance at the airport.

Other facilities

edit

The Federal Aviation Administration Mike Monroney Aeronautical Center is located on the west side of the airport. The Center headquarter's the Civil Aerospace Medical Institute, FAA Academy and Logistics Center.

The U.S. Department of Justice has major Justice Prisoner and Alien Transportation System (JPATS) facilities at Will Rogers World Airport. The Federal Transfer Center and its principal air hub is built on the west side of the airport grounds, off of Taxiway G.

The U.S. Customs and Border Protection operate their CBP Air and Marine Operations National Air Training Center facility on airport grounds. They operate a hangar on the north side of the airport, adjacent to the JPATS Hangar.

The Oklahoma City Composite Squadron of Civil Air Patrol meets on Tuesday evenings at 6:30 pm on the grounds of the Oklahoma Air National Guard base on the west side of the field.

The City of Oklahoma City Department of Airports manages Will Rogers World Airport and the other city-owned airports: Wiley Post Airport and Clarence E. Page Municipal Airport.[39] The Airport Trust is led by Director Mark Kranenburg.[39]

Businesses and other onsite institutions

edit

Corporate, air taxi

edit

Will Rogers World Airport has a separate terminal facility used by air taxi and corporate service, although most of these flights use the Wiley Post Airport, Oklahoma City's FAA-designated reliever facility.

Maintenance, repair, operations and fixed-base operations

edit

AAR Oklahoma has a fixed-base operation location, as well as a major maintenance, repair, and overhaul facility and regional headquarters at Will Rogers World Airport, in addition to other aircraft maintenance and aircraft on ground organizations.

ARINC has major facilities on the airport premises, including plans to double the size of their current facility.[40]

Atlantic Aviation has a fixed-base operation located on the east side of the airport, off of Taxiway H. This is Atlantic's first Greenfield project.

Other facilities

edit

Southwest Airlines has one of its largest customer service and support centers on the northern grounds of Will Rogers World Airport.

Will Rogers World Airport is home to Metro Technology Center's Aviation Career Campus.[41] The aviation center offers training to prepare aircraft maintenance technicians with classrooms, practical labs, and separate airframe and powerplant hangars are available for academic and hands-on training. The Aviation Maintenance Technician program is an 18-month course that is certified and approved by the Federal Aviation Administration.

The facility is on the west side of the airport, north of the FAA center. One notable sight on the MetroTech campus includes a donated AirTran Airways DC-9-30 in the post AirTran Airways / ValuJet merger colors.

Will Rogers World Airport permanently hosts the Ninety Nines Museum of Women Pilots.[42] The facility is located on more than 5,000 square feet (460 m2), occupying the entire second floor of the International Headquarters building. It features a repository for a unique collection of the papers, personal items and other historic artifacts of some of the most significant achievements and adventures of the international community of women pilots. Its library and exhibit areas will provide new insights into the role women pilots played in the development of aviation.

Lariat Landing

edit

Lariat Landing is a new development on the east side of the airport grounds that encompasses 1,000 acres (400 ha).[43] The development is meant to generate increased non-airline revenue for the airport while still growing air service. The development will be mixed use with nearly half of it, west of Portland Avenue, designated to direct aviation support (with runway access) with an additional portion dedicated to aviation support companies. The remaining portion east of Portland Avenue will be zoned for retail, industrial, and commercial office space.[43]

The direct aviation parcels of Lariat Landing will be marketed towards aircraft maintenance, aircraft manufacturing, commercial air cargo, and corporate aviation companies. Atlantic Aviation and ARINC are two tenants already located in the new development area. The aviation support district will be targeting companies that provides aviation related goods and services. The target companies include freight forwarders, logistics, cargo, warehousing, distribution operations, and manufacturing companies.

Located between Interstate 44 and Portland Avenue, the office park will have a retail village as the gateway to its campus. It will target offices, hotels/motels, retail, warehouse, distribution, and logistic companies.[43]

Property will only be leased due to FAA requirements and will have a maximum term of 40 years. The realignment of Portland Avenue is currently in process while the new 48-inch (1.2 m) waterline installation has already been completed.

Incidents

edit

On March 26, 1939, Braniff International Airways Trip 1, a Douglas DC-2, registration NC13727, crashed while attempting to return to the airport. The aircraft had just departed when a cylinder on the left engine tore loose from its mounting and caused a tear in the engine cowling. Subsequent drag from the torn cowling resulted in a stall on the wing, and the plane cartwheeled on to the airport grounds, just yards from the safety of the runway. The captain cut the fuel switches just before impact, but misted fuel from the tanks spread over the hot engines, causing a fire. The captain, first officer, and three passengers survived. The flight's hostess and seven passengers, however, died in the disaster.[44]

A Rockwell Sabreliner, registration N5565 crashed on January 15, 1974, after descending below minimums on an ILS approach in low clouds and fog. Both occupants were killed.

On December 21, 2012, a U.S. Customs and Border Patrol Cessna Citation crashed during landing at Will Rogers Airport. Both occupants survived; one had minor injuries.[45]

On November 15, 2016, a Southwest Airlines employee, Michael Winchester was shot and killed in a parking garage; a 45-year-old suspect, Lloyd Dean Buie, was subsequently found dead of an apparently self-inflicted wound.[46] Winchester was the father of Kansas City Chiefs long snapper James Winchester[47] and himself a former punter and member of the Oklahoma Sooners' 1985 national championship college team.[48]

On June 19, 2024, Southwest Airlines Flight 4069 nosed down to an altitude of 525 feet above Yukon, Oklahoma, 9 miles from Will Rogers Int'l Airport, and received an automated altitude warning from air traffic control, but recovered to land safely at OKC without incident.[49]

References

edit
  1. ^ "News:Statistics". Will Rogers World Airport.
  2. ^ a b "OKC Airport Trust reveals new name and brand for Will Rogers World Airport". WRWA. Retrieved August 31, 2024.
  3. ^ FAA Airport Form 5010 for OKC PDF, effective July 11, 2024.
  4. ^ "OKC airport data at skyvector.com". skyvector.com. Retrieved August 18, 2022.
  5. ^ "About Barrow". City of Barrow. Archived from the original on February 20, 2012. Retrieved August 27, 2016.
  6. ^ Slipke, Darla (January 10, 2019). "2018 Marks All-Time High for Passenger Traffic at WRWA" (PDF). Will Rogers World Airport. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  7. ^ a b c "Oklahoma City, OK: Oklahoma City Will Rogers World Airport (OKC)". Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Retrieved August 29, 2024.
  8. ^ History page at South OKC Chamber of Commerce
  9. ^ "The May 31 – June 1, 2013 Tornado and Flash Flooding Event".
  10. ^ "The Parking Spot is coming to Will Rogers Airport!! – Page 3".
  11. ^ October 8, 2013
  12. ^ Sellers, Caroline (August 28, 2024). "OKC Airport Trust unveils new name, brand for Will Rogers World Airport". KFOR News. Retrieved September 4, 2024.
  13. ^ "Gensler Annual Report 2006" (PDF).
  14. ^ a b c "Will Rogers World Airport Expansion Project, Oklahoma". Airport Technology.
  15. ^ Brickman, Stefanie (July 23, 2008). "Airport Trust Votes to Approve Contract to Expand Oklahoma City's Will Rogers World Airport". OKC Biz. Archived from the original on January 15, 2013. Retrieved August 10, 2008.
  16. ^ "Will Rogers World Airport Phase III Terminal and Concourse Expansion Study" (PDF). [permanent dead link]
  17. ^ George, Tom (September 25, 2015). "Expansion at Will Rogers World Airport could lead to more international flights".
  18. ^ @fly_okc (January 11, 2019). "@NathanJohn85 Our $89 million expansion project breaks ground the first week of March. Find out more at" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  19. ^ Lee, Erika (September 10, 2021). "Will Rogers World Airport Completes Terminal Expansion". News 9. Archived from the original on October 5, 2022.
  20. ^ "Flight Timetable". Alaska Airlines. Retrieved January 29, 2017.
  21. ^ "Allegiant Air". Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  22. ^ a b "Flight schedules and notifications". Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  23. ^ a b "FLIGHT SCHEDULES". Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  24. ^ "Delta offers nonstop service from OKC to New York". KFOR. March 15, 2022.
  25. ^ "Frontier Airlines 1Q25 Various Network Resumptions". Aeroroutes. Retrieved November 20, 2024.
  26. ^ "Frontier". Archived from the original on September 12, 2017. Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  27. ^ "Southwest plans to reduce service and staffing in Atlanta, union says". September 25, 2024. Retrieved September 27, 2024.
  28. ^ "Southwest Airlines - Route Map". Southwest.com. June 16, 2022. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  29. ^ "Timetable". Archived from the original on January 28, 2017. Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  30. ^ "News: Statistics". WRWA. Archived from the original on September 25, 2023.
  31. ^ "Rental cars", WRWA (accessed October 8, 2013).
  32. ^ "Airport Begins $3.8 Million Parking Garage Improvement Project - Garages A and B Slated for Repairs, Maintenance and Upgrades" (PDF). Will Rogers World Airport. September 27, 2011. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 4, 2016.
  33. ^ "Airport parking & rates". WRWA. Archived from the original on November 24, 2016.
  34. ^ "Air National Guard Units Listing". Air National Guard. Archived from the original on February 16, 2011. Retrieved March 11, 2012.
  35. ^ Quinlan, Jon (July 21, 2015). "Model of total force comes to a close at Tinker". Air Force Reserve Command. Archived from the original on August 15, 2015.
  36. ^ "Air National Guard unit transitions with arrival of aircraft". Colorado Springs Gazette. July 22, 2015. Archived from the original on October 23, 2015.
  37. ^ AirForces Monthly. Stamford, Lincolnshire, England: Key Publishing Ltd. February 2023. p. 16.
  38. ^ http://ebird.osd.mil/ebfiles/e20130522923067.html [dead link]
  39. ^ a b Airports, City of Oklahoma City. (accessed October 8, 2013)
  40. ^ "ARINC Will Double Its Aircraft Service Center at OKC With a Second Commercial Hangar".
  41. ^ Aviation Career Campus Archived July 21, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Metrotech.org. (accessed October 8, 2013)
  42. ^ Ninety Nines Museum of Women Pilots Archived July 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (accessed October 8, 2013)
  43. ^ a b c WRWA Land Development Program, Flyokc.com. (accessed October 7, 2013)
  44. ^ "Accident description". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
  45. ^ Wells, Jesse. Small plane crashes at Will Rogers World Airport, KFOR.com, December 21, 2012 (accessed October 8, 2013)
  46. ^ Keith Allen; Steve Almasy (November 15, 2016). "Airline employee killed at Oklahoma City airport; suspect dead". CNN.
  47. ^ "Father of Chiefs' long-snapper killed at airport". November 15, 2016.
  48. ^ Staff, Transcript (November 15, 2016). "UPDATE: Shooting suspect found dead, airport beginning operations again".
  49. ^ "Southwest Airlines Flight Drops to 525 feet Over Oklahoma Town, Prompting FAA Probe". businessinsider.com. Retrieved July 25, 2024.
edit