That's not an airport on the Spit - it's a complete new fill area outside of the Islands. The Spit is to the east. Certainly not big enough to serve as a major airport for large commercial aircraft - moving Billy Bishop a little farther away from downtown perhaps, but the whole proposal looks to chase it out with further urbanization on the Islands so little net gain.
That proposal deserves to stay in the '60s.
Durham is home to over 600k people. You forgot Whitby with 130k alone.It's hardly the north-eastern fringe of the GGH area. There's Pickering (100k), Ajax (120k), then Oshawa (160k). That's almost 400,000 people within the immediate eastern catchment before including the series of towns leading to Peterborough 50miles away, the actual north-eastern fringe of the Greater Golden Horseshoe. What else does Pickering straddle? Toronto, the largest city in the country. And York Region. It's pretty central all things considered. If a new large airport were to be considered today I'm pretty sure this site would be it, which likely helped the reasoning years ago.
I'm not too keen either way. But one thing I'm curious about is sure maybe Pearson can be significantly expanded, but what about the roads leading into and out of it. They seem like they're pretty well full. And it seems like people are betting on Hamilton being a contender for a secondary major airport. but that also appears to be pretty well choked in. The 403 up/down the mountain is like the one way in and it's tight during rush. Don't see that being expanded. And in terms of fringe-worthiness, location-wise it appears moreso.
Durham is home to over 600k people. You forgot Whitby with 130k alone.
Pearson's catchment area is the Greater Golden Horseshoe. For flights beyond Canada/US it's likely even more expansive. Airports are regional in nature. Pearson's popularity is based on the variety of connections it offers rather than the number of people that live in Mississauga. Likewise Munro's lack of passengers has little to do with Hamilton having too few people.
Pearson's catchment area is the Greater Golden Horseshoe. For flights beyond Canada/US it's likely even more expansive. Airports are regional in nature. Pearson's popularity is based on the variety of connections it offers rather than the number of people that live in Mississauga. Likewise Munro's lack of passengers has little to do with Hamilton having too few people.
In the long term it makes sense that we have 3 large airports: 1 in the east (Pickering), 1 in the west (Hamilton), and Pearson in between (Mississauga). On top of that we have the convenience of Billy Bishop for shorter flights (downtown Toronto).
It will be interesting to see how Swoop's operations at Hamilton affect the airport. One would expect that having some regular scheduled flights (even if it is operated by a LCC airline) would help the airport.
There's something to be said for building the airport in Lake Ontario rather than on our remaining farm and rural lands. The locals can hardly complain, when they're aren't any locals.That's not an airport on the Spit - it's a complete new fill area outside of the Islands.
There's something to be said for building the airport in Lake Ontario rather than on our remaining farm and rural lands. The locals can hardly complain, when they're aren't any locals.
Japan's Kansai International Airport is a good example.
If we're shutting down the Pickering OPG plant in 2024, that seems like a good space to start the landward portion of the new island airport. No one is going to want to reside on that land.
Doesn't the reactor area have to remain dormant for a pretty long time before it can be fully demolished?
Swoop, and other LCCs should all move to other, lower cost airports. This would have the added benefit that they can charge even less. Doing so could draw some traffic away from Pearson, which means it is saved for a bit longer.