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Dallas Love Field (IATA: DAL, ICAO: KDAL, FAA LID: DAL) is a city-owned public airport in the neighborhood of Love Field, 6 miles (9.7 km; 5.2 nmi) northwest of downtown Dallas, Texas. [2] It was Dallas' main airport until 1974 when Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) opened.
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 16:19, 25 January 2019: 806 × 1,237 (156 KB): Lerloare: Wrong file: 16:18, 25 January 2019: 806 × 1,237 (166 KB): Lerloare
Fort Worth declined the offer and thus each city opened its own airport, Love Field in Dallas and Meacham Field in Fort Worth, each of which had scheduled airline service. In 1940, the Civil Aeronautics Administration earmarked US$1,900,000 (equivalent to $42,600,000 in 2024) for the construction of a Dallas/Fort Worth Regional Airport.
McKinney National Airport (ICAO: KTKI, FAA LID: TKI), formerly Collin County Regional Airport at McKinney, is a general aviation airport located in McKinney, Texas, United States, about 30 miles (48 km) north of downtown Dallas. The airport is a reliever airport for Dallas Love Field and Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.
The walkway between the Terminal A and Terminal B stations is also used as a FlixBus station. Terminals C, D, and E can be accessed both landside (via DFW's Terminal Link shuttle) or airside (via the Skylink people mover) from Terminal A's upper level. Dallas's other major airport, Dallas Love Field, can be accessed by taking the Orange Line to ...
Skylink is an automated people mover (APM) system operating at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFW). It is an application of the Innovia APM 200 system and is maintained and operated by Alstom. When it opened in 2005, it was the world's longest airside airport train system (AirTrain JFK, which operates landside, is longer). [3]
DART operates a bus route, dubbed Love Link, which connects the station to the airport's passenger terminal. Dallas's other major airport, Dallas Fort Worth International Airport, is also located on the Orange Line; a trip between Inwood/Love Field and the DFW Airport station takes approximately 39 minutes. [5]
The airport never reached capacity and saw its traffic dwindle while traffic at Love Field in Dallas continued to grow. The April 1957 OAG lists 97 scheduled departures a day Tuesday to Thursday, more than half to nearby Dallas Love Field. American Airlines had 30, Braniff 22, Trans-Texas 19, Continental 13, Delta 7 and Central 6.