Groundbreaking ceremony for Austin-Bergstrom’s West Gate Expansion
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Austin-Bergstrom International Airport (AUS) today celebrated the groundbreaking ceremony for its West Gate Expansion project.
The event was attended by dozens of Central Texas and Austin leaders that included Congressman Doggett, Congressman Casar, Austin Mayor, Kirk Watson, and Austin City Council members Vanessa Fuentes and Ryan Alter.
The project is one of the near-term Journey With AUS expansion projects that will improve the Central Texas airport that continues to serve a record-breaking volume of passenger and airline activities.
“This is just the start of a series of transformative airport projects that will modernise and improve the AUS experience for everyone,” said Mayor Watson.
“We know more is needed, and more is coming to make travel comfortable, exciting and easy. The Journey With AUS will bring unique changes to the traveler experience as we navigate turning this 24/7 facility into an active construction site.
“The flurry of construction activities mixed with passengers and airport operations will be a big change for our community as we make progress on this project and other expansion projects, like a new concourse, but it will be worth it to have a home airport every Austinite can be proud of.”
The West Gate Expansion project will increase terminal space beyond its current gates 33 and 34 totalling an additional 84,500 gross square feet over three levels of apron, concourse and mezzanine space.
According to the Texas gateway, the expansion will add amenities that children, families, and travellers of all ages will enjoy such as new F&B spaces, public art, more seating areas, the largest restrooms in the terminal and an exciting third-level outdoor public patio with amazing views of the city skyline.
The project will construct three new gates that will eventually offset the closure of existing gates during future construction activities.
“Following the post-pandemic surge in air travel demand, we must modernise and improve our airport,” said Robert Goode, interim assistant city manager.
“I applaud the teams at the Department of Aviation for their fast-acting responsiveness in bringing this project from conception to breaking ground in and look forward to providing our airport guests with more space, more amenities and an improved experience.”
Austin-Bergstrom International Airport notes that it is dedicated to expanding in an environmentally conscious way by setting a goal of a 3-Star certification sustainability from the Austin Energy Green Building (AEGB).
Like all airport improvements, no local Austin taxpayer dollars will be used to fund the project. The improvements will be funded through traditional airport development funding sources, such as airport cash reserves, current and future airport revenues and future revenue bond proceeds. AUS is currently evaluating opportunities for federal grant funding to support the project.
Enabling work began this summer and the expansion is estimated to open in 2026.
“This project will deliver much-needed relief for our travellers and our airport,” said Somer Shindler, AUS’s chief development officer.
“This is just the beginning of our journey to invest billions of dollars into our airport over the next decade to serve the needs of travellers and airline partners today and in generations to come, all while driving economic prosperity for our community.”
It’s not relief. They are just building three gates to replace the three gates that are at the south terminal that will be demolished. The airport was growing by more than 1 million new passengers each year before covid and only slowed down for the two years of the pandemic. The passenger growth has since come roaring back to those same levels in 2022 and continues. Airport planning is just too slow to react to growth that has been occurring since the airport opened in 1999. It’s already several million beyond its passenger capacity and expected to grow more. Most likely the airport and the airlines will have to start limiting the number of flights due to limits on capacity.
Our aurport is quickly becoming top busy and crowded to keep growing by over a million passengers a year.