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The Dayton Convention Center is the primary public convention center in Dayton, Ohio, United States.. Located in downtown Dayton at 22 E. Fifth Street, the Dayton Convention Center is a 150,000 sq ft (14,000 m 2) facility with 68,000 sq ft (7,150 m 2) of exhibit space, a 672-seat theater, and 19 meeting rooms including a VIP lounge overlooking the exhibit halls.
The base was decommissioned in the early 1990s, and the land reverted to the city, which used it to replace Robert Mueller Municipal Airport as Austin's main airport in 1999. The airport is the third busiest in Texas, after Dallas/Fort Worth and Houston–Intercontinental, as
Emerald Coast Convention Center (Okaloosa Island/Destin) Knight International Center ; Miami Airport Convention Center (Miami) Miami Beach Convention Center; Ocean Center (Daytona Beach) Orange County Convention Center ; Palm Beach County Convention Center (West Palm Beach) Prime F. Osborn III Convention Center (Jacksonville) Tampa Convention ...
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Access road from I-70 to terminal. In 2011, Dayton International Airport completed a new air traffic control tower.The tower is about 254 feet (77 m) high with a 12,000-square-foot (1,100 m 2) base building of office and operational space for FAA personnel.
As the need for commercial air service became clear in the 1920s, the 1928 Austin city plan called for the establishment of a municipal airport. Austin voters supported a bond election to fund the airport (among other projects) later in 1928. The airport was constructed a few miles northeast of downtown, on what was then the edge of the city.
Ohayocon is a three-day anime convention typically held during January/February in Dayton, Ohio at the Dayton Convention Center. Ohayocon's name is derived from the similarity between "Ohio", the convention's location, and Ohayou ( おはよう ) , which means "good morning" in Japanese .
Greater Southwest International Airport (IATA: GSW, ICAO: KGSW), originally Amon Carter Field (ACF), was a commercial airport serving Fort Worth, Texas, from 1953 until 1974. Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) opened in 1974 a few miles north to replace Greater Southwest and Dallas Love Field as a single airport for the Dallas–Fort ...