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Where did some airport codes come from?
Here's an interesting topic- What is the origination of some 3-letter airport codes that appear to have more to it than just the city name? I know some of these, but not most:
GEG Spokane MSY New Orleans IAD Washington-Dulles MCO Orlando MCI Kansas City BNA Nashville ORD Chicago-O'Hare EZE Buenos Aires OGG Kahului SDF Louisville BDL Hartford FCO Rome GRU Sao Paulo RSW Ft. Myers MDT Harrisburg and who banished all Canadian cities to have codes starting with Y? |
MCO - McCoy Field, the old airport name before Disney. Was just a couple of quanset huts at the end of the runway (FedEx uses them now). Now called Orlando International, but the MCO still sticks.
[This message has been edited by PremEx (edited 04-18-99).] |
ORD-Orchard Field (previous name for O'Hare)
OGG-Named after some guy with the last name of Hogg although I forget who he was I believe he was a WWII hero. IAD-International Airport Dulles |
GRU = Aeroporto Internacional de Guarulhos
For a list of airport codes, check this url: http://www.cowtown.net/users/rcr/aaa/ccmain.htm [This message has been edited by timchen (edited 04-19-99).] |
BDL - Bradley International Airport of Hartford
FCO - The airport name of Rome, starting with the word F...... (forgot how to spell it) |
I can't speak for some of the other names but Canada's codes came from the two-letter codes of railway cities. Canadian Pacific Railways had codes for all their respective cities which had a railway stop. The Y was added for commonality so as to be distinctly Canadian. (It is not to what some people may think that Canada was the last one in the race and ran out of city codes to use).
Toronto - TO (Toronto, Ontario) : YTO Montreal - MQ (Montreal, Quebec) : YMQ Vancouver - VR (VancouveR) : YVR Only after when each city built more than one airport, did the names dispensed. But that's all I know, I'm afraid! |
Hi Celestar ,...
what about Halifax Int'l (YHZ) ... where does the Z come from ???? http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif MMM ps: by the way EZE = EZEIZA,... the name of Buenos Aires Int'l airport in Argentina [This message has been edited by MMM (edited 04-19-99).] [This message has been edited by MMM (edited 04-19-99).] |
BNA - Berry field Nashville Airport
Also, not on your list was TYS - Knoxville This is for Tyson Field. |
MCI in K. C. is Mid-Continent International.
SDF in Louisville is Standiford, not sure whether that's the current or a former airport (not sure of the spelling either). |
VPS = Ft. Walton Beach, FL. The airport is actually closer to a smaller, neighboring city, Valparaiso, FL.
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FCO = Fiumicino (Rome)
I like SGN = Ho Chi Minh City (ex Saigon) LED = St. Petersburg (ex Leningrad) PEK = Beijing (Peking) Which just goes to show that politics and city names may change but IATA stays the same. |
MSY = Moisant Int'l. (I'm not sure about the Y at the end, but it does make sense to me when you say it out loud...)
[This message has been edited by Matt Wald (edited 04-19-99).] |
Try also SVO for Moscow, Russia (I believe based on Sheremetyevo, to distinguish it from the other Moscow airports, Vnukovo and Domedovo).
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MCO (Orlando) used to be McCoy Air Force Base (formerly Pinecastle AFB, after the nearby little town). It was named after USAF Col. Michael McCoy.
RSW (Ft. Myers) was named after the airport, Greater Southwest Regional. Since there was already a code for SWR, the R was placed in front of SW. ------------------ AlphaSigOU Causa latet vis est notissima - the cause is hidden, the results are well-known. |
KIN- Kingston, Jamaica
MBJ- Montego Bay, Jamaica These are easy! ------------------ |
MDT -- Harrisburg International Airport, however it's in Middletown, PA, and I believe MDT is for Middletown Dept of Transportation, which operates or used to, as they are forming a regional airport authority.
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My favorite:
SUX = Sioux City, IA (If you've ever been there, the airport name is no surprise). Cheers, 'toad |
I thought BNA stood for Better Nashville Airport?
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IAH International Airport Houston, now known as George Bush IAH, as opposed to the original Houston Airport
HOU Houston Hobby |
>Which just goes to show that politics and city names may change but IATA stays the same.
Except, of course, for JFK |
You know, it's only a matter of time before airport authorities sell a name to a corporation just like a ballpark or golf tournament. Then you could have airport codes matching stock tickers. Think of it, AOL- The America On-Line San Francisco International Airport. That would get Silicon Valley-ites going!
Then you could think of selling a name to an airline: The Delta Cincinnati Int'l Airport. Now that would get the feds thinking about monopolies here and there.... |
P.S. What was JFK's code/name before it was renamed for Kennedy? Idlewild, was it?
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Wasen't Denver's new airport DIA at the beginning? (Denver International Airport)
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I have often wondered how Sioux Gateway Airport got its name given its proximity to a leading computer production center.
One airport code that I have always found appealing is FUN, for Funafuti on Tuvalua. How often does a flight end in FUN? |
FAT....Fresno Air Terminal
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>What was JFK's code/name before it was renamed for Kennedy? Idlewild, was it?
Yep, Idlewild. IDW, I think, but I'm not certain. It sticks in the back of my mind I once had a luggage tag that read NYC. C'mon - Someone here's got to be older than me! |
I remember it being referred to as DIA but don't remember if that was the code. Of course now it is the same as Stapleton's was.
[This message has been edited by JeffS (edited 04-20-99).] |
MSY in New Orleans stands for Moisant Stock Yard, which is what it was before it was an airport.
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The old airport code for the old New York International Airport (Idlewild) used to be IDL. After President Kennedy's assassination in 1963 the airport and identifier were named after him.
IDL still soldiers on... it's now the airport identifier for Indianola, Mississippi. When Washington Dulles was being built, it was planned that the identifier was to be DIA; as you can see it would have caused massive confusion with National Airport, whose code is DCA, That's why it's now IAD. ------------------ AlphaSigOU Causa latet vis est notissima - the cause is hidden, the results are well-known. [This message has been edited by AlphaSigOU (edited 04-20-99).] |
I always assumed that the X at the end (i.e. PDX) indicated international airport.
Is that true or just something I imagined one day and thereafter believed to be true? |
CVG for Cincinnati - because it's really across the river in CoVinGton, Ohio.
Does anybody know why Nantucket, Mass., is ACK? Random letters from the town name? |
100K:
But AOL is in Northern Virginia. They'd never sponsor a west coast airport. Would they? |
Counsellor: I'm probably older than you, and I agree with AlphaSigOU that it used to be IDL. This is sort of like BWI. Back in the '60s, this was Friendship International (I don't remember what the code was); then the state of Maryland bought the place and renamed it. As a part of the process, they petitioned the FAA (or whoever assigns codes) to change the code to BWI. No matter how much it cost them, it's paid off.
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Well... they could re-name IAD for AOL... (Sacrilege!) http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/wink.gif
Here's a bit of useless trivia: what is the other official name for Miami International Airport (MIA)? Wilcox Field. (You have to really look for the sign -- it's right next to the sign on the main terminal building.) The old code for Baltimore's old Friendship airport probably was BAL, though I'm not sure about that. ------------------ AlphaSigOU Causa latet vis est notissima - the cause is hidden, the results are well-known. [This message has been edited by AlphaSigOU (edited 04-20-99).] |
Great thread. Here's one I haven't been able to figure out:
What does "HP", America West's airline code, stand for? I have asked several HP personnel and no one has known. |
HP is the IATA-assigned code for America West; is doesn't stand for anything. Southwest's IATA code is WN and also doesn't stand for anything.
OMNI: The last one or two letters in an aircraft's registration number are sometimes reserved for airlines. Examples: SW, WN - Southwest DL, DA, DE, DN, WA - Delta (WA - ex-Western Airlines aircraft) U, UA - United AA - American US, RC - Northwest (RC - ex-Republic Airlines aircraft) AU - US Airways (from the former airline code of Allegheny Airlines) TW - Trans World Airlines HK - Trans States Airlines (the initials are of the owner - Hulas Kanodia) ------------------ AlphaSigOU Causa latet vis est notissima - the cause is hidden, the results are well-known. [This message has been edited by AlphaSigOU (edited 04-20-99).] |
That reminds me of another--
HPN is in WHite PlaiNs, New York |
FYI:
CVG is in Covington, KENTUCKY not OHIO. I like HTS for Huntington/Ashland. I think it stands for Huntington TriState. And with this post I become a full fledged member, with all the perks and benefits! [This message has been edited by akperry (edited 04-20-99).] |
yeah, akperry
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I was just kidding about corporate sponsorships of airlines. It's tough to imagine quasi-government entities getting commercial that way, although the airport-using crowd is attractive from a demographic standpoint.
No one knows why Spokane is GEG? I didn't know either; I actually looked at a roadmap- A road that runs by Spokane Int'l Airport is Geiger Blvd., which was probably the name of the neighborhood or airport before it was renamed. |
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