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'Other' airport gets facelift
St. Petersburg-Clearwater International is spending $9.5-million on renovations.
By STEVE HUETTEL
Published June 26, 2007
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Allegiant Air flight passengers Allyson Myers, 6, (left) and Alex Myers,4, help their parents Kelly and Brandon Myers with the luggage at St.Petersburg-Clearwater International Airport. The family visiting from Indiana spent their summer vacation at Disney World.
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[Times photo: Julia Kumari Drapkin]
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[Times photo: Julia Kumari Drapkin]
"Bye, honey! See you next Monday!" said Dee Boles to her husband Stan in front of St. Petersburg-Clearwater International Airport. The Indian Rocks Beach couple prefer St. Petersburg-Clearwater International to Tampa International because it is quicker and closer to home.
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[Handout]
The tunnels will be a first at the airport, allowing passengers to avoid exposure to weather as they board or exit planes.
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ST. PETERSBURG - Rebounding from its slowest year in recent history, the Tampa Bay area's "other" airport is about get a makeover. The $9.5-million terminal renovation at St. Petersburg-Clearwater International will create more seating space for departing travelers, expand ticket counters and replace pipes that date to the 1950s. Perhaps the most obvious change: the airport's first jet-loading bridges, tunnels that passengers walk through to board and exit airliners at bigger airports. St. Petersburg-Clearwater International still uses ramps or stairs. Visitors from wintry climes love the warm breeze in their face as they climb off their plane and walk across the tarmac in March, says Noah Lagos, the airport's executive director. But come the heat and showers of August, it's another story. "Nobody likes to get off the airplane and get soaking wet or perspire so much you're soaking wet," Lagos said. A year ago, the idea of expanding tiny St. Petersburg-Clearwater International to handle more passengers would have seemed ridiculous. The airport lost its two largest carriers when Southeast Airlines shut down in 2004 and ATA departed after striking a partnership with Southwest Airlines, the biggest player at Tampa International Airport. Passenger traffic plummeted 55 percent to just under 600,000 in 2005 and fell below 400,000 last year -- the lowest level in at least 15 years. But the airport caught an updraft in November with the arrival of Allegiant Air, a fast-growing discounter based in Las Vegas. Officials expect 700,000 travelers will go through the airport this year, with Allegiant and USA 3000 Airlines keeping strong schedules through the summer season. By comparison, Tampa International handled 18.8-million passengers last year. "We're starting to become a year-round destination," Lagos told Pinellas County's Tourism Development Council this month. Much of the renovation work involves expanding a cramped gate area to hold more departing travelers. On busy evenings when three flights are departing about the same time, as many as 600 passengers are in a holding area with 325 chairs. "It gets very crowded, " says airport engineer Frank Aiello. The expanded space will seat 530 in new chairs that replace ones more than 20 years old. Even older are cast iron bathroom pipes from the original airport construction in the 1950s. They'll go, too. Three artists are proposing designs for a 45-foot-long glass wall, the piece of public art designed for the airport, with a price tag of $110,000. The loading bridges run about $1-million apiece. They will come off a new two-story tower with a glass front facing the ramp. Work on the gate area should begin in January and be completed in early 2009. Steve Huettel can be reached at huettel@sptimes.com or (813) 226-3384.
[Last modified June 26, 2007, 00:39:19]
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Comments on this article
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by John
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06/28/07 01:40 PM
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Scrap the $110,000 art. Replace it with art from local schools. Stop wasting taxpayer's money.
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by Rae
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06/27/07 01:45 PM
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Why doesn't everyone read the reporter's comments (Steve 06/26/07 11:56 a.m.)below. Trust me I know this to be true that the Airport does not touch the General Fund of Pinellas County at all and is it's own enterprise.
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by Abraham
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06/26/07 08:10 PM
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Mr. Wendy T. Farris, as a member of the "have" contingent, I would like to bring to your attention that this is a "free" country, and if you are still a "have not" member of society, it is your own fault. Get some ambition you lazy bum!
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by Wayne
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06/26/07 08:03 PM
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Steve,
How did they come up with %105
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by Jim
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06/26/07 05:30 PM
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It appears to me that instead of upgrading the Airport and discontinuing the "Choice" education program that costs millions on fuel for Buses to pick-up one kid, and take them cross town, would be a better than letting-go all our City workers. Hello
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by Steve
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06/26/07 11:56 AM
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95% of the money is coming from the federal govt., 5% from Fla. and the other 5% from the county, according to the airport. Also, there will be two loading bridges at $1m apiece. Sorry that wasn't in the story (i'm the reporter).
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by Rusty
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06/26/07 11:02 AM
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As a former resident of Dunedin I am happy to hear that The Clearwater/St Pete Airport is being renovated for a new era. It's a great airport to fly in/out of. With the addition of Allegiant and Skybus,I can fly home alot and cheaply from Greensboro.
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by Wendy T Farris
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06/26/07 09:58 AM
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The "haves" are making the employment decisions for the "have nots" in this case.
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by Brian
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06/26/07 09:39 AM
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Don't worry everybody. After all, the county commissioners will say it's only FAA money. An unbelievable waste...
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by Stephen
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06/26/07 09:26 AM
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Most likely a good chunk of the funds will come from the FAA from airport improvement grants. I am suprised the article didn't ask the airport officials on this.
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by AL
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06/26/07 08:36 AM
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A roundabout with fountain and unmaintained pedestrian walkunder for Clearwater. Maybe Pinellas county will take the lead in government waste. How about fixing a cap based on airport earnings? I think it should start with a 55% cut.
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by Dee
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06/26/07 07:48 AM
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If the money for renovations is coming from Penny for Pinellas, it will be money well spent. This airport needs modernizing. If the money is from the county capital budget, $110,000 for public art is unnecessary and needs to be axed.
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by Heather
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06/26/07 07:26 AM
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And just where are all the jobs the county commissioners promised when the airport expands? Oh wait, I'm sure one or two of them have relatives in the construction industry! Yet another waste of money in Pinellas County!!
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by Duane
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06/26/07 07:23 AM
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Assuming there are three bridges between the planes and the terminal at $1,000,000 each, about $6.5 million will be spent inside the terminal. Could the public get the detail on that? We are supposedly in a budget crisis.
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by rock
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06/26/07 01:14 AM
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$110,000 for a glass wall? Why aren't they threatening to cut that one out of the budget instead of cutting library hours, etc?
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