Miami International Airport in vital land expansion deal

Miami International Airport officials are deep in a time-sensitive deal cited as key to the growth of the airport’s airlines and to expanding both passenger and cargo operations.

Aviation officials are meeting this week with the tenant of two county-owned hangars to re-acquire the buildings, demolish them, and then expand airport maintenance operations beyond the hangars into a large area along Northwest 36th Street.

Aviation Director Ralph Cutié unveiled the plan to the county’s Airport Committee last week, stressing the pivotal nature of the ongoing dealing without detailing who else is involved or the ultimate cost. He did say he expects significant advancement by October.

He highlighted the impact of the deal with two numbers: while the airport’s passengers totaled 56 million last year, he expects 77 million a year by 2040. That magnitude of growth depends in part on expanded aircraft maintenance facilities.

“Our planning staff has been working diligently for the last several years on our airport master plan,” Mr. Cutié noted, “and one of the components of that plan is to be able to build additional maintenance repair operations at MIA proper to allow for that growth.”

The two hangars are pivotal in that, he said.

“We’ve had our initial meeting with the tenant for two hangars over on the north end of the airport,” he revealed. “The importance of those hangars is that acquiring those hangars would allow us to get access to an area behind those hangars right next to 36th Street, which is a very large area that we’ve been interested in developing for quite a few years.” That “would allow us to in the future not only demolish the hangars but to really grow maintenance repair operations and allow for the growth of all of our airlines.”

For decades Miami International has been landlocked because it is in the heart of a developed area where any added land comes at a high premium.

The airport has achieved gains in passengers and cargo despite the scarcity of new construction areas, and the $9 billion airport revamp now underway is being accomplished while the airport is in full and growing operation.

Current passenger totals have receded a bit from last year’s record pace even while freight tonnage is booming, the Aviation Department’s latest report shows.

Through July, passengers were down 1.45% and freight tonnage had risen 12.38%. International passengers were down 1.05%, while domestic passengers declined 1.77% for the year’s first seven months. In July alone, international passengers dipped 0.39% and domestic air travel was off 3.11%, for a total decline of 1.83%. Air freight continued to expand from July 2024, soaring 13.74%.

But after three straight years of passenger growth, Mr. Cutié sees the passenger dip as entirely temporary. “We could very well break last year’s record if we have a couple of big days in the holidays,” he told the committee.

For the expansion deal, “we had the initial negotiation meeting yesterday, we have another meeting scheduled for next week, and we’re working on the methodologies for the appraisals and how we come to some number that we can agree on,” Mr. Cutié said.

Said committee Chair Danielle Cohen Higgins, “I really challenge our administration and you, director, to really put the pressure to try and wrap up these negotiations as soon as humanly possible so that we can acquire – re-acquire – our own, the people’s land, the people’s hangar.”

The post Miami International Airport in vital land expansion deal appeared first on Miami Today.

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