Tijuana International Airport

Tijuana International Airport (IATA: TIJ, ICAO: MMTJ), sometimes referred to as General Abelardo L. Rodríguez International Airport, in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, is Mexico's second northernmost airport after Mexicali International Airport. The airport is located in the city's Otay Centenario borough, just immediately south of the U.S border. It is one of the 20 busiest airports in Latin America, handling 8,925,900 passengers in 2018,[1] and the fifth busiest in Mexico after Mexico City, Cancun, Guadalajara and Monterrey airports. The airport can handle up to 10 million passengers per year and 360 flights per day.

Tijuana International Airport

General Abelardo L. Rodríguez International Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic, Military
OperatorGrupo Aeroportuario del Pacifico
ServesTijuana–San Diego
LocationTijuana, Baja California
(CBX terminal in Otay Mesa, San Diego, California)
Hub for
Elevation AMSL489 ft / 149 m
Coordinates32°32′27″N 116°58′12″W
WebsiteAeropuerto Internacional de Tijuana
Map
TIJ
TIJ
TIJ
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
09/27 2,960 9,711 Asphalt
10/28(closed) 2,000 6,561 Asphalt
Statistics (2019)
Total Passengers8,917,160
Ranking in Mexico5th
Source: Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico

As of December 9, 2015, with the opening of the Cross Border Xpress bridge and terminal, Tijuana airport can be accessed directly from the U.S.; passengers can walk across a bridge spanning the U.S.-Mexico border between a terminal on the U.S. side and the main facility on the Mexican side.[2][3]

The airport serves as hub for Volaris and the only one operating at both concourses. It used to be a focus city for Aero California, Aerolíneas Internacionales, Líneas Aéreas Azteca, and ALMA de Mexico. Tijuana's airport was the largest and main hub for Avolar, a low-cost airline that operated from 2005-2008, and the airport's second leading airline at a time. It was one of the first low-cost airlines in Mexico, such as SARO and TAESA.

It is operated by Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico, a holding group that controls 12 international airports in central and northern Mexico. In terms of domestic destinations (totaling 34 cities), it is the best connected airport after Mexico City.[4]

History

The airport from 10,000 feet (center of image, Brown Field runway in the United States at bottom)
Main corridor of the airport.

The Tijuana airport opened as the "Aeropuerto Federal de Tijuana" on May 1, 1951,[5] replacing Tijuana's former airport, then located on today's Aguacaliente Boulevard. The airport's runway had an orientation of 10/28 and was 2 kilometers in length (6,500 feet) and the first terminal was built on the southwest part of the airport, facing the current terminal built in 1970. The airport was named after General Abelardo L. Rodríguez, Governor of Baja California, and late President of Mexico.

In 1954, Mexicana de Aviacion began direct Tijuana-Mexico City flights. The airport was incorporated to ASA in 1965. Under President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz, a National Plan of Airports was initiated and headed by Gilberto Valenzuela Ezquerro, Secretary of Public Works (Secretario de Obras Publicas).[6] As more people arrived and settled in Tijuana in the 1960s, demand for flights increased.

Runway and Facilities

At the inauguration of the Amistad Dam between Texas and Mexico in 1969, President Richard Nixon notified President Gustavo Díaz Ordaz of his intent to initiate Operation Intercept to stem the flow of narcotics between the U.S. and Mexico.[7] As political pressure rose between Washington and Mexico City, to minimize incursion into U.S. airspace, Gilberto Valenzuela Ezquerro, Secretary of Public Works and in charge of the Tijuana airport’s expansion, re-oriented the runway from 10/28 to 09/27. The change in orientation impacted Tijuana's approach over Cerro San Isidro, a 2,600 foot (800 meter) land obstacle which increased the east approach glide slope above 3 degrees and prevented a full Instrument Landing System (ILS approach) on the 27 runway required during foul weather landings. Due to prevailing winds, the 27 runway is Tijuana's main approach pattern.

The construction of the new terminal and a 2.5 kilometer 09-27 runway to accommodate larger aircraft was finished in July 1970 and inaugurated on November 19, 1970, by then-President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz and Gilberto Valenzuela Ezquerro, Secretary of Public Works. The total cost for the improvements in 1970 was $108,487,000 Pesos ($8,678,960 U.S. dollars).[6] The original terminal was then assigned as an air base for the Mexican Armed Forces, and it is now known as the aeropuerto viejo, or old airport. The terminal, however, is seldom referred as Terminal 1, with Main Terminal being referred as Terminal 2.

In 1983, Tijuana became Mexico's fastest growing city, to meet increased airport demand; both terminal and parking areas were expanded. In 1987, air traffic suffered a sharp decline due to the suspension of service by Aeromexico. With the restructuring of Aeromexico in 1988, service and air traffic increased causing delays in service. Terminal space and parking for passengers became inadequate. To meet airport demand, Mexico issued its first two 10 year private sector airport "co-investments" to expand both the departure lounges and parking areas. Construction of both were completed in 1991[8]

Airport Privatization

Mexico’s airport privatization program was initiated on December 22, 1995, when the Secretariat of Communications and Transportation (Secretaria de Comunicaciones y Transporte) published the "Ley de Aeropuertos" (Airport Law). The Tijuana airport became part of the Pacific Airport Group (Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico) consisting of 12 airports and headquartered in Guadalajara. In 1999, a consortium consisting of the Spanish investors Unión Fenosa, Dragados and Aeropuertos Españoles y Navegación Aérea (AENA), together with the Mexican strategic investor Grupo Empresarial Ángeles, collectively known as Aeropuertos Mexicanos del Pacifico, S.A. de C.V. (AMP), won the Pacific 12 airport package.

Expansion

As part of the airport privatization concession, the airport terminal was expanded and renovated in 2002, when the extension of concourse A and B was built, allowing the terminal to double its capacity. Several taxiways were also expanded to allow the operations of larger aircraft such as the Boeing 747. Nevertheless, as the airport has become one of the most important hubs and gateways in the country, there is a plan of a new terminal, which could house the operations of the major airline at the airport: Aeroméxico (including Aeroméxico Connect). As of today, both of the concourses have been expanded and remodeled, including the progressive introduction of glass-jetways replacing the old ones. From 2011 to 2012, the airport's Terminal 1 underwent major renovations in Concourse A and B, including new customs and international arrivals facilities, construction of a new bus terminal, and other exterior renovations. In December 2015 the Cross Border Xpress (CBX) cross-border bridge and passenger terminal on the U.S. side opened.

International Service

From 2006 until September 2014, Aeroméxico operated three weekly flights to Tokyo-Narita, but in September 2014 they stopped in Monterrey instead.[9] Aeroméxico resumed services to Shanghai on March 26, 2010 after the airline halted service 11 months earlier due to the 2009 flu pandemic.[10] The airline temporarily suspended service to Shanghai once again from September 4, 2011 to January 10, 2012. In 2019, it was announced that the Mexico City-Tijuana-Shanghai route would be cancelled, making Hainan's service to Beijing the only remaining international flight from the airport. However, international service ended in early 2020 after Hainan announced the cessation of all flights to Mexico.

View of CBX bridge from parking lot on U.S. side, with Tijuana Airport on the left and the CBX U.S. terminal on the right

Cross Border Xpress ("CBX", Terminal 2)

CBX terminal on the U.S. side of the border

Cross Border Xpress, or CBX, is the world's third cross-border passenger terminal (after Geneva and Basel-Mulhouse). It consists of a terminal on the U.S. side of the border and a bridge to connect the Tijuana Airport with that terminal, and opened on December 9, 2015.[11]

The project consists of a second terminal, located on U.S. soil adjacent to the border, and an international bridge. This building serves as a check-in and processing facility for departing passengers only, with no gates or arrival facilities (thus functionally resembling Hong Kong International Airport Terminal 2), but with its own parking and customs offices, that links passengers to gates at Terminal 1 via a 390-foot bridge across the border.[12] The structural scheme is intended to allow greater access to flights out of Tijuana Airport for both domestic and international air carriers.[13]

The project had an initial estimated cost of 78 million US dollars and a final completion cost of 120 million US dollars, funded by Mexican and U.S. private investors and Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico.[12][14] Building E of Tijuana's Terminal 1 underwent restructuring, to support the new bridge own structure on Mexican soil. The initial design was the work of Ralph Nieders[15] who first introduced the concept of a cross-border passenger terminal in Mexico City to Mexicana de Aviación in 1989, to the San Diego Association of Governments in 1990 and in 2002, to the Bush-Fox Presidential Commission, Partnership for Prosperity, in Washington D.C. The design of the joint binational Terminal 2 building is the work of late Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta.

Location

Terminal 1 layout
Duty free area
Baggage claim area

Runway 09/27 runs east-west approximately 300 meters south of the U.S.-Mexico border. The approach to the runway is either from the east (normally) or from the west (when Santa Ana wind conditions exist).

Brown Field Municipal Airport (SDM/KSDM) in San Diego, California lies just over one nautical mile (about 2 km) north of TIJ, with a similar runway length and orientation. However, SDM is a general aviation field not set up for scheduled passenger service. Both SDM and TIJ are designated ports of entry for their respective countries.

Facilities

The airport consists of a single runway, a parallel taxiway, and a 23 gate main terminal with two concourses, a food court and a high-tech control tower, one of the tallest in Mexico. At the opposite side of the Main Terminal building there is another terminal and runway, the Old Airport Terminal, which houses military aviation, mostly performed by the Mexican Armed Forces; south of the adjacent runway (closed for commercial operations), there are 4 remote positions, mostly used by cargo airliners, linked by a shorter taxiway to the main runway. The airport is also used to a lesser extent for general aviation, housed at the General Aviation Building (GAB Terminal).

Main Terminal:

  • Number of gates: 23
  • Contact positions: 12
  • Remote positions: 4
  • Number of jetways: 10
  • Lounges:
    • VIP Room Tijuana (Main Terminal - Upper Level)
  • Food court (Concourses A, B (airside), Main Corridor (landside))
  • Customs & Immigration (International Arrivals are handled at Concourse B, departures at Concourse A)
    • Passport & Nationality Control (Domestic arrivals)
  • Taxi & car rentals (Arrivals & Departures area)
  • Bus Terminal (East of Main Terminal)
  • Duty Free (Main corridor, Concourses A, B)
  • Parking area (Building E)

GAB Terminal:

  • General aviation apron
  • Gate A
    VIP Room
  • Pilots lounge
  • Passengers lounge

Old Airport Terminal

  • Apron
    • Contact positions: 2
    • Remote positions: 4
    • Helipads: 3
  • Parking area

Cross Border Xpress ("CBX", Terminal 2):

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

View of concourse A.
Entrance to the parking lot.
Check-in counters at the airport.
Interjet A320.
AirlinesDestinations
Aeroméxico Guadalajara, Mexico City
Aeroméxico Connect Mexico City, Monterrey
Seasonal: León/Del Bajío, Querétaro
Calafia Airlines La Paz, Loreto, San José del Cabo
Interjet Guadalajara (suspended),[16] Mexico City
Magnicharters Seasonal: Guadalajara
VivaAerobus Cancún, Culiacán, Guadalajara, León/Del Bajío, Mazatlán, Mexico City, Monterrey, Morelia, San José del Cabo
Seasonal: Puerto Vallarta
Volaris Acapulco, Aguascalientes, Cancún, Chihuahua, Ciudad Juárez, Ciudad Obregón, Colima, Culiacán, Durango, Guadalajara, Hermosillo, Huatulco, Ixtapa/Zihuatanejo, La Paz, León/Del Bajío, Loreto, Los Mochis, Mazatlán, Mérida, Mexico City, Monterrey, Morelia, Oaxaca, Puebla, Puerto Vallarta, Querétaro, San José del Cabo, San Luis Potosí, Tapachula, Tepic, Torreón/Gómez Palacio, Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Uruapan, Veracruz, Zacatecas

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
Aeronaves TSM Hermosillo, Querétaro
Ameriflight Ontario, Phoenix–Sky Harbor
Estafeta Culiacán, Hermosillo
FedEx Express Memphis, Wichita
TUM AeroCarga Guadalajara, Hermosillo, Toluca

Old airport terminal

Old Airport Terminal seen from above

The Old Airport Terminal (known for locals as Aeropuerto Viejo, old airport) is set for aviation of the Mexican Military and federal police forces. This military airbase belongs to the Northwestern Region of the Mexican Air Force. One cargo airline operates at the terminal.

Incoming flights of these armed forces agencies usually arrive from the Mexican Air Force Central Region, mostly from Mexico City International Airport or nearby airbases.

GAB Terminal

Note: The General Aviation Building (GAB Terminal) is used for general/non-commercial aviation or private jets. The General Aviation Building is designed to receive up to 120 persons per hour and it has all the services for the convenience of passengers during their private flights. It has a surface of 420 m2 (4,700 sq. ft.), where there are government offices, administrative offices, a pilots lounge, and passenger lounge. Two aviation schools are based at this terminal, along with one cargo airline operating there.

Statistics

Cargo area of the airport

Busiest routes

Busiest routes at Tijuana International Airport (2019)[17]
Rank City Passengers Ranking Airline
1  Mexico City, Mexico City 1,059,820 Aeroméxico, Aeroméxico Connect, Interjet, VivaAerobus, Volaris
2  Jalisco, Guadalajara 854,728 Aeroméxico, Interjet, MAgni, VivaAerobus, Volaris
3  Sinaloa, Culiacán 439,959 VivaAerobus, Volaris
4  Guanajuato, León 302,908 Aeroméxico Connect, VivaAerobus, Volaris
5  Nuevo León, Monterrey 209,742 VivaAerobus, Volaris
6  Michoacán, Morelia 173,226 VivaAerobus, Volaris
7  Baja California Sur, San José del Cabo 93,490 4 Calafia Airlines, VivaAerobus, Volaris
8  Aguascalientes, Aguascalientes 84,790 Volaris
9  Sonora, Hermosillo 78,488 2 Volaris
10  Jalisco, Puerto Vallarta 77,312 VivaAerobus, Volaris
11  Baja California Sur, La Paz 77,186 2 Calafia Airlines, Volaris
12  Sinaloa, Mazatlán 77,124 3 VivaAerobus, Volaris
13  Oaxaca, Oaxaca 75,592 1 Volaris
14  Michoacán, Uruapan 68,934 5 Volaris
15  Puebla, Puebla 60,106 1 Volaris
16  Nayarit, Tepic 59,058 Volaris
17  Zacatecas, Zacatecas 57,926 Volaris
18  Durango, Durango 53,054 2 Aeroméxico Connect, Volaris
19  Sinaloa, Los Mochis 46,783 1 Volaris
20  Guerrero, Acapulco 42,001 1 Volaris

Ground transportation

Bus

The airport may be reached from Downtown Tijuana or Zona Rio by local bus. It costs $11.00 MXN ($0.60 USD).

Shuttle

Volaris provides a shuttle service from San Diego, California, United States[18] to General Abelardo L. Rodríguez International Airport to allow San Diego residents make connections within Mexico. You cannot board this shuttle at San Diego International Airport, but instead take a local bus from the Airport to the Depot Amtrak Station, 1050 Kettner Blvd. on the corner of Broadway Ave, Downtown San Diego, CA 92101. There is no equivalent shuttle from TIJ airport back to downtown San Diego as most people pay to use CBX and then take private vehicles or Uber or taxis as there is no public transportation from CBX.

Taxi

Due to a prohibition by Mexican law, Mexican cities' public taxis may drop passengers at the airport, but cannot pick up passengers from the terminal. The airport thus offers transportation for passengers from the terminal to any point of the city on the SAAT Taxis (Servicio Aeroportuario de Autotransporte Terrestre, Spanish for Terrestrial Transport Airport Service, an airport government-leased taxi company). This and other authorized taxi carriers may be reached at the arrivals hall. This inflates taxi prices, forcing passengers to either pay them or walk outside the airport.

gollark: Surprising.
gollark: Cubez is probably trying to patch their geometry dash mod or something.
gollark: They are "software defined radio" things which are very cheap due to quirks of a random DVB-T tuner chip released years ago.
gollark: RTL-SDRs.
gollark: Why would that happen?

See also

References

  1. "Traffic Report". Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico. January 2019. Retrieved January 30, 2020.
  2. Dibble, Sandra. "Cross-border airport bridge opens next month". Archived from the original on 2015-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-24.
  3. ""California Newest Airport Terminal Extends to Mexico, By ELLIOT SPAGAT, 'ASSOCIATED PRESS,' SAN DIEGO — Dec 7, 2015, 10:31 AM ET". Archived from the original on December 7, 2015. Retrieved December 7, 2015.
  4. "Tijuana: Bien conectada". Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-24.
  5. AENA (July 2000). Plan Maestro del Aeropuerto de Tijuana. Gruou Aeroportuario del Pacifico. p. 1.4.
  6. Lopez, Fermin (September 30, 1970). Secretaria de Obras Publicas- Memoria de labores 1964-1970. Mexico City, Mexico: Compania Impressora y Lito Grafica Juventud, S.A. de C.V. pp. 186–215.
  7. Doyle, Kate. "Operation Intercept The perils of unilateralism". The National Security Archive. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  8. Steve Casteneda-Ralph Nieders, co-authors (October 20, 1998). Crossborder Air Passenger Terminal Facility Phase 1 Report October, 1998 (PDF). South County Economic Development Council. p. 5. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  9. "Volará Aeroméxico de Monterrey a Tokio". www.milenio.com. Archived from the original on 2014-08-26. Retrieved 2014-08-22.
  10. "Tijuana-Shanghai flights to resume | UTSanDiego.com". Signonsandiego.com. 2010-01-12. Retrieved 2012-09-02.
  11. "Pedestrian bridge opens", Los Angeles Times, December 9, 2015
  12. Marosi, Richard (December 9, 2015). "$120-million bridge lets travelers walk from San Diego to Tijuana's airport". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  13. "San Diego and Tijuana to Share an Airport". Slate. November 19, 2013.
  14. "Cross-border airport bridge to link Tijuana with San Diego". San Diego Union Tribune. September 5, 2013. Archived from the original on June 26, 2015. Retrieved November 21, 2013.
  15. Millman, Joel (August 1, 2001). "San Diego Looks South to Tijuana For New Airport Across Border". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  16. "Interjet limits its operation to 6 destinations". EnElAire (in Spanish). May 2020. Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  17. "Traffic Statistics by Airline" (in Spanish). Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes. December 2020. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  18. "Shuttle Tijuana/San Diego "
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