Airport celebration tops today’s list of arrivals
Mathis Winkler
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT -- It’s unlikely residents would vote it their most
loved landmark in the area. But the Thomas F. Riley Terminal at John
Wayne Airport has been around for 10 years, and officials will hold a
celebration today to mark the occasion.
The airport goes back much further than the terminal’s existence, of
course. Planes have arrived and departed at the airport since Eddie
Martin started flying here in 1923. In 1967, the Eddie Martin Terminal
opened to take in 400,000 passengers annually. Three years later, traffic
had more than doubled.
Billed as the largest public works project in county history, the
Board of Supervisors began the Airport Improvement Project in 1985 to
make room for the ever-increasing number of passengers. When the Riley
building opened in 1990, the old terminal was torn down. The site, just
to the south of the current terminal, now serves as a parking lot for
planes at night.
As a result of a settlement agreement with the city and community
groups, the size of the new airport terminal, as well as the number of
flights, will stay restricted until 2005. Newport Beach’s City Council
adopted a resolution in August to urge county supervisors to extend the
airport restrictions until the end of 2025.
The original agreement limits the number of passengers to 8.4 million
and allows no more than 73 daily departures. Departures are allowed from
7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday.
Arrivals are allowed from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. every day.
The terminal “is one of the most admired facilities in the world,”
said Alan L. Murphy, the airport’s director. “With this celebration, we
want to show our appreciation to the residents of Orange County for their
support and patronage.”
Anyone visiting the airport today will receive some goodies, ranging
from luggage tags to bags of peanuts to blowup planes. At 11 a.m., even a
John Wayne look-alike will make the rounds and gladly oblige for Polaroid
snapshots, while supplies last.
Also, the “JENNIES2JETS2000” exhibition will be on display. It’s based
on Vi Smith’s history book of aviation in Orange County and will include
historical airplanes and those of the future suspended around the
terminal.
Drawings for such prizes as plane tickets, hotel stays and car rentals
will be held from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
And if all that hasn’t convinced you to hang out at the airport today,
maybe this will: Parking will be free throughout the day.
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