Rochester International Airport

Rochester International Airport (IATA: RST, ICAO: KRST, FAA LID: RST) is seven miles (11 km) south of downtown Rochester, in Olmsted County, Minnesota. It is the second busiest airport in Minnesota. It used to be "Rochester Municipal Airport", its name before adding customs and immigration facilities specifically for Mayo Clinic purposes in 1995.[3]

Rochester International Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorCity of Rochester
LocationRochester, Minnesota
Hub forMayo Clinic MedAir
Elevation AMSL1,317 ft / 401.4 m
Coordinates43°54′30″N 92°30′00″W
Websitewww.flyrst.com
Maps

FAA Diagram
Rochester International Airport
Rochester International Airport
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
13/31 9,034 2,754 Concrete
2/20 7,301 2,225 Concrete
Statistics (2018)
Number of Passengers366,542 26%[1]
Based aircraft65

The airport covers 2,400 acres (971 ha) and has two concrete runways: 9,034 ft × 150 ft (2,754 m × 46 m) runway 13/31 and 7,301 ft × 150 ft (2,225 m × 46 m) runway 2/20.[2]

Airline service is on American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and United Airlines on commuter jets. Charter service is occasionally offered by Sun Country Airlines on Boeing 737s. The airport has a large FedEx Express terminal and a general aviation terminal.

History

The original Rochester airport was founded in 1928 by the Mayo Foundation to bring patients to the Mayo Clinic. It was in what is now southeast Rochester and occupied 285 acres (1.2 km²). The following year 'Rochester Airport' was dedicated, and the Rochester Airport Company was founded as a subsidiary of the Mayo Foundation. Northwest Airlines began running Ford Trimotors to Rochester from St. Paul. Rochester was one of the first destinations from the Twin Cities in Northwest Airlines history, behind Chicago, Winnipeg, Green Bay, and Fargo.

In 1940 the runways were paved and more land was acquired, bringing the airport's area to 370 acres (1.5 km²). During World War II the Army Air Corps conducted training operations from the airport. In 1945 the Mayo Foundation gave the airport to the city of Rochester, but the Rochester Airport Company continued to operate the field under an agreement with the city. The airport was renamed Lobb Field in 1952. In 1960 it was decided to replace Lobb Field with a new airport southwest of town because it could not be expanded to allow larger airliners and was too close to the urban area of Rochester. The original Rochester Airport closed in 1961.

In 1960 Rochester Municipal Airport opened at its current location 7 miles (11 km) south of downtown Rochester; in 1965 runway 13 was 6400 feet and runway 2 was 4000 feet. Northwest and Braniff moved to the new airport in 1960, but Ozark's DC-3s stayed at Lobb until 1961; North Central Airlines arrived in 1968 and Braniff left around the same time. The first jets were Northwest 727s in 1965.

American Airlines began service to Chicago O'Hare in 1988. 1995 saw the addition of a US Customs post and it became the Rochester International Airport. TWA operated flights to St. Louis in early 2001, but these routes were dropped very soon due to the merger with American Airlines. On September 15, 2005, the primary runway was lengthened from 7,533' to 9,034' following a three-month closure for renovations; runway centerline and touchdown zone lighting were added. The change was made to allow large wide body aircraft, which had been weight-restricted upon departure.

In 1970 Imperial Airways offered scheduled helicopter service to Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. On December 4, 1970 Imperial Airways announced it was canceling its scheduled helicopter flights in Minnesota, including from Minneapolis-St Paul International Airport (MSP) to Rochester.[4]

In 2020 the airport received a $2,479,991 CARES Act award.[5][6]

2009 tarmac stranding incident

The Rochester International Airport was the site of the six-hour 2009 tarmac stranding incident that made international news and resulted in the first fines ever imposed on airline carriers by the U.S. Department of Transportation for stranding passengers on a tarmac.

Future

In March 2019, plans for construction of an additional gate and jet bridge were announced. The proposal for the addition came after a large increase in passengers the previous year and congestion. [7] In July 2019, the Rochester Airport Commission began accepting bids for the jet bridge project. The commission also discussed repaving parts of runway 02/20 as well as additional dining and shopping options in the terminal. [8] At the end of July 2019 the airport received $3.3 million in federal grants to improvements, including the jet bridge project and runway reconstruction.[9]

In February 2020 the airport was awarded $750,000 by the US Department of Transportation for attracting new service, with the federal grant's stated purpose being "revenue guarantee and marketing program to attract new service to Denver, Co., on United Airlines." [10] Airport directors noted that the grant does not guarantee the new destination yet and also does not exclude possible other destinations.

Airlines and destinations

AirlinesDestinations
American Eagle Chicago–O'Hare
Delta Connection Atlanta, Minneapolis/St. Paul
United Express Chicago–O'Hare, Denver[11]

Airport directors are trying to get more service into Rochester. The directors have recently contacted the current providers, American and Delta, about adding more destinations, and have also contacted United and Frontier, to bring new nonstop destinations.[12] On February 26, 2017, United announced it was adding three daily flights to Chicago–O'Hare beginning June 8. The new flight was to compete with existing service from American Airlines.[13]

In August 2012, just days after Allegiant Air announced flights between Rochester and Phoenix (Allegiant Air has since dropped its Rochester service altogether), the United States Department of Transportation gave the airport $500,000 and the city of Rochester gave the airport $250,000 to help recruit more airlines and non-stop destinations.[14]

On May 31, 2018 Elite Airways announced that they would be launching service direct to Phoenix, Arizona and St. Augustine, Florida starting in July 2018. This service was to allow Mayo Clinic staff, patients, and families to easily move back and forth between Mayo's headquarters in Rochester and its other main facilities in the Phoenix and Jacksonville metropolitan areas.[15] They ended the service on August 22, 2018, citing low bookings.

Cargo destinations

AirlinesDestinations
AirNet Express Des Moines, Fort Dodge (IA), Mason City (IA), Milwaukee, Omaha, St. Paul-Downtown
FedEx Express Indianapolis, Memphis, Salt Lake City
FedEx Feeder
operated by CSA Air
Brainerd, Duluth, Wausau
Freight Runners Express Milwaukee

Top destinations

Top domestic routes out of RST
(November 2019 - October 2020)
[1]
Rank City Passengers Carrier
1 Chicago–O'Hare, IL 46,000 American, United
2 Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN 29,000 Delta
3 Atlanta, GA 11,000 Delta
4 Denver, CO 760 United

General Aviation Facilities

Rochester Aviation is the general aviation terminal at the airport. It is owned and operated by Hiawatha Aviation, Inc. The terminal provides line services, refueling services, and caters largely towards business aviation. On April 1, 2006, the ownership of Rochester Aviation was passed onto Regent Aviation of St. Paul. In November 2007, Regent Aviation in turn sold its ownership stake in Rochester's general aviation terminal to Signature Flight Support, a worldwide fixed-base operator provider. Aircraft rental and flight instruction at RST are available through Spectrum Pilot Services, with various aircraft providing flight instruction with a group of Certified Flight Instructors. The airport is also home to the Southeastern Minnesota Flying Club, which has had a presence at both RST and its predecessor Lobb Field for over 50 years.

Access

Transportation to Rochester International Airport is available from downtown Rochester via $30 taxi or $15 shuttle service. Rochester Yellow Cab, Rochester Taxi, and Med-City Taxi service the airport with both cabs and shuttles.

Accidents near RST

  • On December 8, 1985, a Learjet 35 operated by Corporate Air Inc, a training flight, rolled inverted and crashed after a missed approach. All three occupants died.[16]

References

  1. "Record high passenger year at Rochester International Airport". www.flyrst.com.
  2. FAA Airport Form 5010 for RST PDF, effective April 26, 2018.
  3. "Airport History - Rochester International Airport". Retrieved March 15, 2019.
  4. "Helicopter Firm Cuts Flights to State Cities". Minneapolis Star Tribune. December 5, 1970.
  5. Uren, Adam (April 15, 2020). "97 Minnesota airports receive federal bailout cash, here's how much they got". Retrieved June 14, 2020.
  6. "U.S. Transportation Secretary Elaine L. Chao Announces $10 Billion in Relief for America's Airports". April 14, 2020. Retrieved June 14, 2020.
  7. "Now boarding at RST: a new jet bridge to ease congestion". Fox 47 KXLT. Retrieved March 18, 2019.
  8. "RST Commission lays out plans for improvements". Fox 47 KXLT. Retrieved July 10, 2019.
  9. "RST to Receive $3.3M for Infrastructure Updates". KAAL ABC 6. Retrieved August 8, 2019.
  10. https://www.postbulletin.com/news/business/federal-grant-funds-trial-route-from-rst-to-points-west/article_6e415362-533d-11ea-ba11-87b1a9ff1f62.html
  11. "United adds 5 regional routes from Denver / Houston in Oct 2020". Routes Online. August 2020. Retrieved August 25, 2020.
  12. RST Airside Times – Airport Director's Update Rochester International Airport. Retrieved June 9, 2012.
  13. "United domestic routes addition from June 201". routesonline.com. Retrieved February 26, 2017.
  14. Rochester Airport gets 750K for more air service KTTC. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  15. Kiger, Jeff (July 18, 2018). "Airline postpones launch of new Rochester flights | Local News". postbulletin.com. Retrieved January 4, 2019.
  16. Accident description for N15TW at the Aviation Safety Network
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