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The Chicago Airport System

  
Provides details on the Chicago O'Hare International and Midway airports. Site also hosts the Community Noise Resource Center and the Department of Aviation.
http://www.ohare.com/

The Chicago Airport System - Official Website- O'Hare

  
Chicago Airport System Home Page ... Video: Welcome to the Chicago Airport System d. Terminal Tunes... d ... The Chicago Airport System. All Rights Reserved. ...
http://www.ohare.com/Ohare/OhareHomepage.shtm

Chicago O'Hare International Airport

  
Chicago O'Hare International Airport - Arrivals, departures, weather, delays, ... Local Time: 07-Jan-2009 12:35 AM © Copyright 2009, Airport-Ohare.com ...
http://www.airport-ohare.com/

Hyatt Regency O'Hare

  
Hotel connected by skywalk to Convention Center, just a 15 mile expressway or commuter train ride to downtown Chicago.
http://ohare.hyatt.com/

Chicago O'Hare Airport Hotels - Find hotels near O'Hare Airport!

  
Find hotels near Chicago O'Hare Airport - book your Chicago O'Hare Airport hotel online and save. ... Copyright © 2007-2008, Airport Hotels O'Hare, All Rights ...
http://www.airporthotelsohare.com/

Ohare Airport Parking Map

  
O'Hare Airport parking map and rates. Rental car companies at airport. O'Hare Airport map. ... Use the free Airport Transit System (ATS) that connects the ...
http://www.visitingdc.com/airports/ohare-airport-parking.asp

News Articles Relating To Ohare Airport.

  
Ohare Airport related articles, and thousands of other stories from hundreds of publications. Newser provides up to date Ohare Airport coverage from several resources.
http://www.newser.com/tag/3301/1/ohare-airport.html

Chicago O'Hare Airport Hotel, Hilton Chicago O'Hare Airport

  
O'Hare Airport Hotel – The Hilton Family of Chicago ... OHare Intl Airport, P.O.Box 66414. Chicago, Illinois 60666. 773-686-8000. Number of Guest Rooms: ...
http://www.chicagohilton.com/hotels_hiltonohare.aspx

Quality Inn Ohare Airport - Hotels.com

  
Hotels.com offers great rates at Quality Inn Ohare Airport in Schiller Park, IL with low rates guaranteed. Find Quality Inn Ohare Airport reviews from people like you.
http://www.hotels.com/property.jsp?property=281873

Chicago O'Hare International Airport

  

http://www.ci.chi.il.us/WorksMart/Aviation/OHare/
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 Questions 'n' Answers about 'ohare airport' Opens New Window.

Q.if flying from morelia mx. to ohare airport on american but operated by mexicania will i land at terminal 5?Related Search:
Air Travel
 flying out of morelia mexico on american airlines operated by mexicania when i land at ohare airport will i be at terminal 5?
A.Yes you do arrive at Terminal 5 to clear immigration and customs.
  

Q.ohare airport?Related Search:
Air Travel
 Does anyone know if Pace airlines has first class seating, and if so, about how much the upgrade is. Also, if USA 3000 had first class, and how much more.
A.Pace Airlines does not sell tickets directly to the public. Pace currently operates for tour operators Apple Vacations and HootersAir, and tickets are only available from those firms. Most of Pace's fleet appears to have either all first class or all coach seating -- not both -- so upgrading isn't possible. [Link] / [Link] / USA 3000's fleet is made up of Airbus A320-214 planes, with no first class seating in their configuration. [Link] 
  

Q.Plane Spotting in general and at Chicago Ohare Airport.?Related Search:
Aircraft
 I was wondering if there are any places at Ohare International Airport for plane spotters. Is there a good street to park at or does Ohare provide an observation deck to view incoming and outgoing planes. I am very interested in plane spotting and would like to get started. If anyone has any tips or advice for me please feel free to answer as well. Thank You
A.You might want to stop in at Signature Flight Support. It's the General Aviation "terminal" at O'Hare. They may or may not let you go out on the ramp. You'll see some of the big airplanes but those are a dime a dozen and you can see them anywhere. What you will see is lots of smaller airplanes and private jets. On the other hand O'Hare is about the worse place to go just to look at airplanes. You should find a smaller commuter airport because it's easier to get closer to the planes. You can try Atlantic Aviation at Midway. From their parking lot you can see planes of all sizes coming and going, and they might let you out on the ramp. You might also try the terminal at DuPage. There's a big window with a good view of the airport. Or go across to the pilot shop on the other side of the airport. You can sit at their picnic table and drink a coke and watch airplanes. I'm not a Chicagoan -- other locals might have better ideas. I fly into all of these airports and I'm just giving you my advice based on the places I fly into.
  

Q.Is there a way to get from Waukegan to Ohare Airport by train?Related Search:
Chicago
 Also how much would it cost to get there by taxi?
A.YES! It would be realllly expensive by taxi. Don't do it, it's super far, and I doubt you'll find a cab company who will want to do this. Cabs from Wilmette (much, much closer to O'Hare) run well over $40. There is a Metra station in Waukegan. A normal ticket would be $5.65 - but if you get a weekend pass it would only be $5. Get on a train to Chicago. You will arrive at Ogilvie Transportation Center. The simplest way to explain it is, when you get out of the train, walk South out of the building, then when you're at the street, go East for 5-6 blocks. You will see the L train - blue line. Get on the blue line L toward O'Hare. It will cost you $2. In the end, you'll end up paying about $7 and you can basically sit back and relax the whole time. Definitely take the train. *** Addition: I just looked up a hypothetical fare from Waukegan, they are saying at least $69.99
  

Q.what happens to confiscated knives at OHare airport?Related Search:
Aircraft
 am a collector of pocket knives. would be interested in where these end up
A.The TSA usually confiscates them an then will sell them I believe but now your knife may be allowed because of stupid changes of rules allowing sharp objects because they think they aren't a danger.
  

Q.How long will it take me to get from Terminal 1 to Terminal 2 in Chicago Ohare Airport?Related Search:
Chicago
 We have a 50 minute layover. Can we make it in that time?
A.50 minutes should be enough time, but be aware that there are "B" gates and "C" gates in Terminal #1. Your plane can arrive in either of them. When you arrive in C gates, you'll have a fairly LONG walk just to get back to the main Terminal #1 (where B gates are), then from there you'll have to go to Terminal 2. Once back at Terminal #1, you can either walk from there, or take the little train. There are no trains between B & C gates. If you need assistance getting around, you can arrange for an electric cart to pick you up. One idea for you to do now: call your airline around the same time as your flight arrival and see what the arrival gate is for today's flight. USUALLY flights arrive at the same gate/same gate area each day. Then you'll have an idea of what's in store for you. Good luck. You should be fine, but don't waste time shopping in Terminal 1; move on to Terminal #2 right away.
  
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Chicago O'Hare
International Airport

IATA: ORDICAO: KORDFAA: ORD
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner City of Chicago
Operator Chicago Airport System
Serves Chicago, Illinois
Elevation AMSL 668 ft / 204 m
Coordinates 41°58′43″N 87°54′17″W / 41.97861, -87.90472Coordinates: 41°58′43″N 87°54′17″W / 41.97861, -87.90472
Website flychicago.com/Ohare/...
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
4L/22R 7,500 2,286 Asphalt
4R/22L 8,075 2,461 Asphalt
9L/27R 7,500 2,286 Concrete
9R/27L 7,967 2,428 Asphalt/Concrete
10/28 13,000 3,962 Asphalt/Concrete
14L/32R 10,005 3,050 Asphalt
14R/32L 13,000 3,962 Asphalt/Concrete
Helipads
Number Length Surface
ft m
H1 200 61 Concrete
Statistics (2006)
Aircraft operations 958,643
Passenger volume 77,028,134
Cargo tonnage 1,718,011
Sources: FAA[1] and airport's website[2].

O'Hare International Airport (IATA: ORDICAO: KORDFAA LID: ORD), also known simply as O'Hare Airport or O'Hare, is a major airport located in the northwestern-most corner of Chicago, Illinois, United States, 17 miles (27 km) northwest of the Chicago Loop. It is the largest hub of United Airlines (whose headquarters are in downtown Chicago) and the second-largest hub of American Airlines (after Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport). It is operated by the City of Chicago Department of Aviation, associated with an umbrella regional authority.

In 2005, the airport had 972,246 aircraft operations, an average of 2,663 per day (64% scheduled commercial, 33% air taxi, 3% general aviation and <1% military).[1] Prior to 2005, O'Hare was the world's busiest airport, in terms of takeoffs and landings. That year, mainly due to limits imposed by the federal government to reduce flight delays at O'Hare,[3] Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport became the busiest by that metric. O'Hare currently accounts for over a sixth of the nation's total flight cancellations.[4] O'Hare International Airport is the second busiest airport in both the United States and the world, behind Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport with 76,248,911 passengers passing through the airport in 2006; a -0.3% change from 2005.[5] O'Hare also has a strong international presence, with flights to more than 60 foreign destinations. O'Hare was ranked fourth in 2005 of the United States' international gateways, with only John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City, Los Angeles International Airport and Miami International Airport, serving more foreign destinations.

O’Hare International Airport was voted the "Best Airport in North America" for the past nine years, by readers of the U.S. Edition of Business Traveler Magazine (1998 - 2003) and Global Traveler Magazine (2004 - 2007), marking the tenth year in a row that O'Hare has earned the top honor.[6]

Although O'Hare is Chicago's primary airport, Chicago Midway International Airport, the city's second airport, is about 6 miles (10 km) closer to the Loop, the main business and financial district.

Contents

[edit] History

The airport was constructed between 1942 and 1943, as a manufacturing plant for Douglas C-54s during World War II. The site was chosen for its proximity to the city and transportation. The two million square-foot (180,000 m²) factory needed easy access to the workforce of the nation's then-second-largest city, as well as its extensive railroad infrastructure. Orchard Place was a small pre-existing community in the area and the airport was known during the war as Orchard Place Airport/Douglas Field (hence the location identifier ORD). The facility was also the site of the Army Air Force's 803 Special Depot, which stored many rare or experimental planes, including captured enemy aircraft. These historic aircraft would later be transferred to the National Air Museum, going on to form the core of the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum's collection.

Air Traffic Control Towers
The new FAA control tower (right) opened in early 1997. The old tower (left) is now used by the City of Chicago, to manage city vehicles engaged in ground operations.

Douglas Aircraft Company's contract ended in 1945 and though plans were proposed to build commercial aircraft, the company ultimately chose to concentrate production on the west coast. With the departure of Douglas, the airport took the name Orchard Field Airport. In 1945, the facility was chosen by the City of Chicago, as the site for a facility to meet future aviation demands. Though its familiar three-letter IATA code ORD still reflects the early identity of the airport, it was renamed in 1949, after Lt. Cmdr. Edward "Butch" O'Hare, a World War II flying ace, who was awarded the Medal of Honor.

See also: Illinois World War II Army Airfields

By the early 1950s, Chicago Midway International Airport, which had been the primary Chicago airport since 1931, had become too small and crowded, despite multiple expansions and was unable to handle the planned first generation of jets. The City of Chicago and the FAA began to develop O'Hare as the main airport for Chicago's future. The first commercial passenger flights were started there in 1955 and an international terminal was built in 1958, but the majority of domestic traffic did not move from Midway, until completion of a 1962 expansion at O'Hare. The arrival of Midway's former traffic instantly made O'Hare the new World's Busiest Airport, serving 10 million passengers annually. Within two years, that number would double, with more people passing through O'Hare in 12 months than Ellis Island had processed in its entire existence. In 1997, annual passenger volume reached 70 million; it is now approaching 80 million. At this time of writing,[when?] United serves its flagship hub with 650 daily departures, but the carrier's utilization of O'Hare peaked at over 1,000 daily flights in 1994.[7]

O'Hare Airport is municipally connected to the city of Chicago via a narrow strip of land, approximately 200 feet wide, running along Higgins Rd, from the Des Plaines river to the airport. This land was annexed into the city limits in the 1950s, to assure the airport was contiguous with the city to keep it under city control. The strip is bounded on the north by Rosemont and the south by Schiller Park.[8] The CTA Blue Line was extended to the airport in 1984.

[edit] Accidents and Incidents

[edit] Accidents

1057 fatalities have occurred as a result of accidents en route to or from Chicago O'Hare. [2]

[edit] Incidents

  • On October 8, 2001, on American Airlines Flight 1238, en route from Los Angeles to Chicago, a psychotic passenger stormed the cockpit 40 minutes before landing in Chicago, causing the plane to drop sharply and causing a panic. In light of the fear ignited by 9/11, flight crew and passengers were quick to wrestle the man to the ground and subdue him. Additionally, a distress signal was sent by the pilots, causing two F-16s to race at supersonic speeds to intercept and escort the aircraft to O'Hare International Airport. This caused a sonic boom in Chicago's northwest suburbs, startling millions of residents. [14]
  • On May 8, 2002, alleged Al-Qaeda member Jose Padilla was arrested after the plane he was on landed at the airport for allegedly being a scout for a plot to plant a dirty bomb.
  • On the afternoon of November 7, 2006, a group of United Airlines workers reported seeing an unidentified flying object near gate C-17.[9] Witnesses stated the object hovered over them before shooting up through clouds. The Federal Aviation Administration was notified of the incident; however, FAA controllers denied seeing anything and a preliminary check of radar found nothing out of the ordinary. The FAA concluded that the object was a weather phenomenon.
For more details on this topic, see Chicago O'Hare UFO sighting 2006.

[edit] Modernization plan

O'Hare's high volume and crowded schedule can lead to long delays and cancellations that, due to the airport being a major hub, can affect air travel across the United States. Official reports rank O'Hare as the least punctual airport in the United States based on percentage of delayed flights.[citation needed] In 2004, United Airlines and American Airlines agreed to modify their schedules to help reduce congestion caused by clustered arrivals and departures. Because of the air traffic departing, arriving, and near the airport, air traffic controllers at O'Hare and its nearby facilities are among the leaders in the world in terms of number of controlled flights per hour.

City management has committed to a $6 billion capital investment plan to increase the airport's capacity by 60% and decrease delays by an estimated 79 percent[15]. This plan was approved by the FAA in October 2005 and will involve a reconfiguration of the airfield and addition of terminal space. Four runways will be added and two decommissioned in order to give the airfield an eight-runway parallel 6+2 configuration similar to that in Dallas. This plan is essential in alleviating the airport's flight limits so that its passenger and cargo numbers will not be eclipsed by other airports.

The Modernization Plan is now under construction, and an additional runway and Air Traffic Control Tower were commissioned on November 20, 2008. The new north runway, designated 9L/27R, will initially serve as a foul weather arrival runway, addressing one of O'Hare's primary causes of delay. An extension of Runway 10/28 (formerly 9R/27L) to 13,000 feet was opened in September, 2008, facilitating the shortening and eventual closure of the equally long Runway 14R/32L.

Design efforts are underway for the remainder of the program, which includes three runway projects, a new western terminal complex and an automated people mover system. The O'Hare Modernization Program has submitted an application to the Federal Aviation Administration to use approximately $180 million in Passenger Facility Charges to fund design work, which will begin in early 2009.

Some land acquisition is necessary for the modernization, requiring approximately 2,800 residents to be relocated. The program will expand the airport's capacity to over 3,800 operations per day, up from the present capacity of 2,700 and will vastly increase passenger throughput. It will also improve the ability of very large aircraft such as the A380 to operate.

Flight caps in place since 2004 expired on October 31, 2008. Ironically, American Airlines eliminated over 60 daily flights at O'Hare because of soaring fuel prices. United announced similar cutbacks. Recent worldwide economic difficulties further complicate the forecasts for airport demand.

     existing runway     new runway     removed runway

[edit] Sustainable Initiatives

The OMP had developed a nationally-recognized program that incorporates “green” principles into virtually every facet of design and construction. This program, detailed in the OMP Sustainable Design Manual (SDM), tracks sustainable design initiatives for occupied buildings and civil construction projects.

Notable sustainable design initiatives include:

• "Clean" Construction Vehicles: Requiring all construction vehicles greater than 50 horsepower to use Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel fuel

• Incorporating green roofs on new structures

• Storing as much dirt on site as possible to reduce truck traffic and emissions on area roadways

• Replacing 154 acres of low quality, inaccessible wetlands on airport property with nearly 450 acres of higher quality, passive recreation space throughout the region

• Recycling approximately 90% of materials from building demolitions and keeping those materials out of local landfills


[edit] Resistance and alternatives

The neighboring communities of Bensenville and Elk Grove Village have been centers of resistance to the expansion plan, in which some residents and businesses will be required to relocate. Bensenville and Elk Grove Village formed the Suburban O'Hare Commission [16] to fight the expansion. So far, they have not had much success. The commission did receive a temporary injunction against portions of the city's expansion project; however, it was soon overturned. The Suburban O'Hare Commission has also been instrumental in pushing for a third regional airport in south suburban Peotone, which it claims would alleviate congestion at O'Hare. However, no airline has committed to the proposed airport, and planning efforts moved very slowly during 2007-2008.

In 1995, the Chicago/Gary Airport Compact was signed by the cities of Chicago and Gary, Indiana, creating a new administration for the Gary/Chicago International Airport just across the state line. While markedly smaller than the proposed Peotone site, this airport already has more land and a longer main runway than Midway Airport. Gary is also many miles closer than Peotone to downtown Chicago. In addition public transportation is already in place to the Loop via the South Shore Line. Indiana and the FAA have provided significant funding for a Gary runway expansion, currently under construction.

Chicago Rockford International Airport (RFD) in Rockford, Illinois has also marketed itself as an alternative for congestion at O'Hare. However, it is at least a 1-1/2 hour trip to Rockford from the Chicago Loop. Currently there is no direct transportation service from downtown Chicago or O'Hare to the Chicago Rockford International Airport, but airline service at the airport continues to grow. Larry Morrissey, the current mayor of Rockford, has pushed for a high-speed rail connection between the two airports to make the Rockford airport a more convenient alternative to O'Hare.

General Mitchell International Airport (MKE) in Milwaukee has consistently attempted to increase its usage by Chicago and Northern Illinois customers. There is a direct Amtrak rail service connecting Chicago with Mitchell Airport. The trains operate 7 round trips each day, taking under 75 min. from the Chicago loop.

[edit] Terminals, airlines and destinations

O'Hare International Airport terminal map

O'Hare International has four passenger terminals. Two or more additional terminal buildings are envisioned. There is the possibility of a large terminal complex for the west side of the field, with access from I-90 and/or the Elgin-O'Hare Expressway, if the runway reconfiguration is completed.

United Airlines and United Express is the largest airline at Chicago O'Hare carrying 48.79% of the passengers. American Airlines and American Eagle is the second largest carrying 39.89% of passengers. [17]

For complete information on flights to and from Chicago O'Hare International Airport, please see the airport's website.

Chicago O'Hare International Airport provides 186 aircraft gates throughout 4 Terminals (1, 2, 3, 5) and 9 concourses (B, C, E, F, G, H, K, L, M)

[edit] Terminal 1 (United Airlines Terminal)

Note: International Arrivals are handled in Terminal 5.

Terminal 1 Layout
Destinations with direct service from O'Hare
Terminal 1 - Concourse B
Terminal 1 - Concourse C
Terminal 1 - Concourse B/C Tunnel for Connecting Passengers
Secondary picture of the so-called "tunnel of love"

Terminal 1 provides 53 Gates on 2 Concourses:

[edit] Concourse B

Concourse B has 21 Gates: B1–B12, B14–B21, B22, B22(A,B)

Airlines and destinations out of Concourse B
Airlines Destinations
United Airlines Albany, Amsterdam, Aruba, Atlanta, Baltimore, Beijing, Boise, Boston, Bozeman [seasonal], Buffalo, Burlington (VT), Cabo San Lucas, Calgary, Charlotte, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, Cancún, Cleveland, Columbus (OH), Cozumel, Dallas/Fort Worth, Dayton, Denver, Des Moines, Detroit, Fort Myers, Frankfurt, Grand Rapids, Harrisburg, Hartford, Hong Kong, Honolulu, Houston-Intercontinental, Indianapolis, Jackson Hole, Jacksonville, Kahului, Kansas City, Kona, Las Vegas, Liberia (CR) [seasonal], London-Heathrow, Los Angeles, Manchester (NH), Minneapolis/St. Paul, Miami, Montego Bay, Munich, New Orleans [seasonal], New York-LaGuardia, Newark, Oklahoma City, Omaha, Orange County, Orlando, Palm Springs [seasonal], Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Phoenix, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Portland (OR), Providence, Puerto Vallarta, Punta Cana, Raleigh/Durham, Richmond, Rochester (NY), Sacramento, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, San Juan (PR), São Paulo-Guarulhos, Seattle/Tacoma, Shanghai-Pudong, Singapore, St. Louis, St. Maarten, St. Thomas, Tampa, Tokyo-Narita, Toronto-Pearson, Tulsa, Vancouver, Washington-Dulles, Washington-Reagan

[edit] Concourse C

Concourse C has 32 Gates: C1-C12, C15, C16, C16A, C17, C18, C18A, C19-C32

United Airlines runs a shuttle service between Concourse C and Concourse F. The shuttles are accessed via stairways near Gate C-9 and Gate E-2A.

Airlines and destinations out of Concourse C
Airlines Destinations
All Nippon Airways Tokyo-Narita
Lufthansa Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Munich
United Airlines See Concourse B
United Express operated by GoJet Airlines Albany, Burlington (VT), Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, Grand Rapids, Greensboro, Jacksonville (FL) [seasonal], Manchester (NH) [seasonal], Oklahoma City, Omaha, Portland (ME), San Antonio, St. Louis, Syracuse, Tulsa
United Express operated by Mesa Airlines Allentown/Bethlehem, Akron/Canton, Atlanta, Appleton, Austin, Birmingham (AL), Boise, Buffalo, Cedar Rapids/Iowa City, Charleston (SC), Charlotte, Cleveland, Colorado Springs, Columbia (SC), Des Moines, Detroit, Green Bay, Greensboro, Greenville (SC), Kansas City, Madison, Memphis, Moline/Quad Cities, Nashville, Portland (ME), Raleigh/Durham, Roanoke, Rochester (NY), Savannah, South Bend, Springfield (IL), Syracuse, Traverse City, Tulsa, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
United Express operated by Shuttle America Albuquerque, Atlanta, Austin, Buffalo, Cedar Rapids/Iowa City, Columbus (OH), Dallas/Fort Worth, Des Moines, Edmonton, Fort Myers, Grand Rapids, Hartford/Springfield, Halifax, Houston-Intercontinental, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Louisville, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Montréal, New Orleans, New York-LaGuardia, Norfolk, Ottawa, Pittsburgh, Quebec City, Raleigh/Durham, Rochester (NY), San Antonio, Toronto-Pearson, White Plains)
United Express operated by SkyWest Airlines Akron/Canton, Allentown/Bethlehem, Appleton, Aspen [seasonal], Austin, Billings, Birmingham (AL), Boise, Bozeman, Calgary, Casper [seasonal], Cedar Rapids/Iowa City, Charleston (WV, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, Cleveland, Colorado Springs, Columbus (OH), Dallas/Fort Worth, Dayton, Des Moines, Detroit, Edmonton, Fargo, Fayetteville (AR), Fort Wayne, Grand Rapids, Hayden/Steamboat Springs [seasonal], Houston-Intercontinental, Indianapolis, Kalispell [seasonal], Kansas City, Knoxville, Lansing, Lexington, Lincoln, Louisville, Madison, Memphis, Milwaukee, Missoula, Moline/Quad Cities, Nashville, Norfolk, Omaha, Ottawa, Peoria, Pittsburgh, Providence, Rapid City [seasonal], Roanoke, Saginaw, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, Savannah, Sioux Falls, South Bend, Springfield/Branson, Springfield (IL), Syracuse, Traverse City, Tulsa, Wausau/Stevens Point, Wichita, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Winnipeg
United Express operated by Trans States Airlines Greensboro, Harrisburg, Madison, Milwaukee, Moline/Quad Cities, Omaha, Raleigh/Durham [seasonal], Richmond, Roanoke, Rochester (NY), South Bend, St. Louis, Syracuse, White Plains

The original 1955 passenger terminal for international flights, was replaced with the modern Terminal 1, designed by Helmut Jahn, in 1987.

[edit] Terminal 2

Terminal 2 Layout

Terminal 2 was built in a large airport expansion in 1962, along with the original portion of Terminal 3.

Terminal 2 was United's sole terminal until the current Terminal 1 was built. In the 1960s/70s/80s it served United, Ozark, Braniff, Eastern, Northwest, Continental and Piedmont. In addition to Concourses E/F (which remain today), there was also an 11-gate Concourse D, which was demolished to make room for new Terminal 1.

In early 2009, Delta Air Lines will move to Terminal 2 from its current home at Terminal 3 to align its operations with Northwest Airlines. At approximately the same time, Continental Airlines will move from Terminal 2 to Terminal 1 as part of its planned move from SkyTeam to the Star Alliance and codesharing with United Airlines.

Terminal 2 provides 30 gates on 2 concourses:

[edit] Concourse E

Concourse E has 16 Gates: E1, E1A, E2, E2A, E3, E4, E6–E15

United Airlines runs a shuttle service between Concourse E and Concourse C. The shuttles are accessed via stairways near Gate E-2A and Gate C-9. Shuttles run every 5-7 minutes between 5:30am and 10:00pm.

Airlines and destinations out of Concourse E
Airlines Destinations
Air Canada Montréal, Toronto-Pearson
Air Canada Jazz Calgary, Montréal, Toronto-Pearson
Continental Airlines Houston-Intercontinental, Newark
Continental Express operated by ExpressJet Airlines Cleveland, Houston-Intercontinental, Newark
JetBlue Airways Boston, Long Beach, New York-JFK
Northwest Airlines Detroit, Memphis, Minneapolis/St. Paul
Northwest Airlink operated by Mesaba Airlines Memphis, Minneapolis/St. Paul
United Airlines See Concourse B
United Express See Concourse C
US Airways Charlotte, Las Vegas, Philadelphia, Phoenix
US Airways Express operated by Air Wisconsin Charlotte, Philadelphia
US Airways Express operated by Republic Airlines Charlotte, Philadelphia

[edit] Concourse F

Concourse F has 14 gates; however, several gates can handle multiple flights at the same time, effectively bringing aircraft capacity to 26: F1(A-D), F2(B-D), F4(A,B), F5, F6(A,B), F7B, F8-F10, F11(A-E), F12, F12(A-C), F14.

Gates with the alpha designation in parentheses are those that board/disembark passengers through a single doorway. Passengers board/disembark aircraft using airstairs, walking along designated pathways, utilizing stairs/elevators to access the gate area. United Airlines is in the process of converting these "outside operations" gates used by United Express into jet bridge operations to increase passenger comfort and ultimately enhance safety and security.

Additional gates – F5B and F7A – are currently under construction which will increase capacity to 28 aircraft. Construction of these gates are scheduled to finish before summer.

Airlines and destinations out of Concourse F
Airlines Destinations
United Airlines
United Express See Concourse C
US Airways See Concourse E
US Airways Express operated by Republic Airlines See Concourse E

[edit] Terminal 3

Terminal 3 provides 77 Gates on 4 Concourses:

Note: International Arrivals are handled in Terminal 5.

Terminal 3 Layout
Terminal 3 is home to American Airlines' Chicago hub
An American Airlines Boeing 767 at Chicago O'Hare
Flags at Chicago O'Hare Terminal 3
Chicago O'Hare Terminal 3

[edit] Concourse G

Concourse G has 26 Gates: G1A, G1B, G2A, G2B, G3–G5, G6A, G6B, G7–G14, G14A, G15–G19, G19A, G20, G21

Airlines and destinations out of Concourse G
Airlines Destinations
American Eagle Albuquerque, Atlanta, Baltimore, Bloomington/Normal, Buffalo, Cedar Rapids/Iowa City, Champaign/Urbana, Charlotte, Chattanooga, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, Cleveland, Columbus (OH), Dallas-Love Field, Des Moines, Detroit, Dubuque, Evansville, Fayetteville (AR), Flint, Fort Wayne, Grand Rapids, Green Bay, Hartford/Springfield, Houston-Intercontinental [starts Spring 2009], Huntsville, Indianapolis, Jacksonville (FL), Kalamazoo, Kansas City, Knoxville, La Crosse, Little Rock, Louisville, Madison, Marquette, Memphis, Milwaukee, Moline/Quad Cities, Montréal, Nashville, New Orleans, Oklahoma City, Omaha, Ottawa, Peoria, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Providence, Raleigh/Durham, Richmond, Rochester (MN), Rochester (NY), Springfield (IL), Springfield (MO), Syracuse, Toledo, Toronto-Pearson, Traverse City, Tulsa [OK], Washington-Reagan, Wausau/Stevens Point, White Plains, Wichita

[edit] Concourse H

Concourse H has 21 Gates: H1A, H1B, H2, H3A, H3B, H4–H10, H11A, H11B, H12–H18

Airlines and destinations out of Concourse H
Airlines Destinations
American Airlines Acapulco [seasonal], Atlanta, Austin, Beijing [begins April 4, 2010], Boston, Brussels, Cabo San Lucas, Cancún, Dallas/Fort Worth, Delhi, Denver, Detroit, Dublin, Eagle/Vail [seasonal], El Paso, Fayetteville (AR), Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers, Frankfurt, Gunnison/Crested Butte, Hayden/Steamboat Springs [seasonal], Houston-Intercontinental, Indianapolis, Jackson Hole [seasonal], Kansas City, Las Vegas, London-Heathrow, Los Angeles, Manchester (UK), Mexico City, Miami, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Montego Bay [begins January 31], Moscow-Domodedovo, Montrose/Telluride [seasonal], New Orleans, New York-LaGuardia, New York-JFK, Newark, Orange County, Orlando, Palm Springs [seasonal], Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Portland (OR) [seasonal], Puerto Vallarta [seasonal], Raleigh/Durham, Reno/Tahoe, Rome-Fiumicino [seasonal], St. Louis, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose (CA), San Juan (PR), Seattle/Tacoma, Shanghai-Pudong, Tampa, Tokyo-Narita, Toronto-Pearson, Tucson, Tulsa, Washington-Reagan, West Palm Beach [seasonal]
American Eagle See Concourse G

[edit] Concourse K

Concourse K has 22 Gates: K1–K5, K6A, K6B, K7–K10, K10A, K11–K20

Airlines and destinations out of Concourse K
Airlines Destinations
American Airlines See Concourse H
Iberia Madrid

[edit] Concourse L

Concourse L has 11 Gates: L1, L2A, L2B, L3-L10

Airlines and destinations out of Concourse L
Airlines Destinations
Alaska Airlines Anchorage, Seattle/Tacoma
American Airlines See Concourse H
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, Salt Lake City
Delta Connection operated by Comair Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, New York-JFK
Delta Connection operated by Pinnacle Airlines Atlanta, New York-JFK
Delta Connection operated by SkyWest Airlines Atlanta, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky
Spirit Airlines Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers, Myrtle Beach [seasonal; begins March 1]

Terminal 3 was also built in the 1962 capital program. During the 1960s, and pre-airline deregulation, Concourse G served TWA, with a few gates reserved for Air Canada. Concourse H & K served American and Delta while Concourse K also served the large "regional" carrier North Central (later known as Republic Airlines). Terminal 3 was significantly expanded in 1983, with the construction of Concourse L for Delta Air Lines, which was initially known as the "Delta Flight Center". Concourse L also handled some international departures until the completion of Terminal 5 in 1993. Notably, Delta Air Lines will move from Terminal 3 to Terminal 2 Concourse E in early 2009[10], the home of merger partner Northwest Airlines. At this time, it is unknown what airline will take over the current Delta gates on Concourse L.

Renovations at Terminal 3 were recently completed, which ran from January 2004 to late fall 2007.

[edit] Terminal 4

Terminal 4 was O'Hare's interim international terminal from 1984 until 1993, located on the ground floor of the main parking garage. International passengers would check in at Terminal 4 and be taken directly to their aircraft by bus. Since the opening of Terminal 5, Terminal 4 has been changed into the airport's facility for CTA buses, hotel shuttles, and other ground transportation. The T4 designation will be used again in the future as new terminals are developed.

[edit] Terminal 5 (International Terminal)

Terminal 5 provides 21 Gates on 1 Concourse.

International Terminal 5 Layout
Chicago O'Hare Terminal 5
International Terminal

Note: Terminal 5 handles all international arrivals at O'Hare (excluding airports with border preclearance), as well as the following departing flights:

[edit] Concourse M

Concourse M has 21 Gates: M1–M21

Airlines and destinations out of Concourse M
Airlines Destinations
Aer Lingus Dublin, Shannon [via Dublin until 31 March]
Aeroméxico Guadalajara, Mexico City, Morelia
Air France Paris-Charles de Gaulle
Air India Frankfurt, Mumbai
Air Jamaica Montego Bay
Air One Milan-Malpensa [ends January 2009]
Alitalia Rome-Fiumicino
Asiana Airlines Seoul-Incheon
BMI Manchester (UK) [ends January 15]
British Airways London-Heathrow
Cayman Airways Grand Cayman [seasonal]
Hainan Airlines Beijing [begins June 2009][11]
Japan Airlines Tokyo-Narita
KLM Amsterdam
Korean Air Seoul-Incheon
LOT Polish Airlines Kraków, Warsaw
Mexicana Aguascalientes, Cancún, Guadalajara, León [seasonal], Mexico City, Monterrey, Morelia, Zacatecas
Royal Jordanian Amman
Scandinavian Airlines System Copenhagen, Stockholm-Arlanda
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich
TACA San Salvador, Guatemala City
Turkish Airlines Istanbul-Atatürk
USA3000 Airlines Cabo San Lucas [seasonal], Cancún [public charter], Cozumel [seasonal], Fort Myers, Ixtapa/Zihuatanejo, Montego Bay, Puerto Vallarta, Punta Cana
Virgin Atlantic Airways London-Heathrow

[edit] Cargo carriers

There are two main cargo areas at O'Hare that have warehouse, build-up/tear-down and aircraft parking facilities. The Southwest Cargo Area, adjacent to Irving Park Road, accommodates over 80% of the airport's all-cargo flights, divided among 9 buildings in two tiers. The North Cargo Area, which is a modest conversion of the former military base (the 1943 Douglas plant area), also receives air freighters. It is adjacent to the northern portion of Bessie Coleman Drive.

Two satellite cargo areas have warehouse and build-up/tear down facilities, but aircraft do not park at these. Freight is trucked to/from aircraft on other ramps. The South Cargo Area is along Mannheim Road. The East Cargo Area, adjacent to Terminal 5, was formerly the airport's only cargo section but has now mostly evolved into an airport support zone.

Although all-cargo flights are important, an even greater amount of global air cargo flies in the cargo holds of passenger aircraft.

[edit] Facilities

[edit] Runways

Runway layout at ORD

There are 6 primary air carrier runways, arranged tangentially in 3 pairs of parallel sets. The largest is Runway 14R-32L, 13,000' x 200'. Runways 14L-32R, 14R-32L, 9L-27R and 10-28 have Category III ILS (Instrument Landing System). All other runway approaches except 4L have full Category I ILS.

All but one of O'Hare's runways intersect, which can create problems in times of inclement weather, congestion at the airport, or high winds. There have been several near-aircraft collisions at O'Hare in recent years. The proposed redevelopment, which essentially eliminates active runway intersections, is intended to alleviate collision hazards at O'Hare.

Three runways of the original 1943 airfield's four have been upgraded to modern standards. Additional runways were constructed in 1955, 1968, 1971 and 2008. In 2003, old Runway 18-36 was permanently closed—its short length and problematic placement no longer justified its continued certification. Runway 18-36 is now shown as taxiway WT on current airport charts.

The proposed redevelopment would entail removal of the 2 northwest–southeast runways, construction of 4 additional east–west runways, and extension of the 2 existing east–west runways. The two existing northeast–southwest runways would be retained.

Runway 32L is sometimes used for departures in a shortened configuration. Planes access the runway from its intersection at taxiway T10 (common) or taxiway M (not common). This shortens the effective length of the runway but allows operations on runway 10-28 to continue without restriction.

O'Hare has a voluntary nighttime (2200-0700) noise abatement program in place. http://www.ohare.com/cnrc/ohare/o_noise_flyquiet.shtm

The proposed runway re-configuration program at O'Hare would also improve the airport for the A380 Super-Jumbo aircraft. As part of the runway re-configuration program, on July 5, 2007, the runway previously designated 9R-27L became Runway 10-28, and on August 30, 2007, Runway 9L-27R became 9R-27L. [13]

On September 25, 2008, a 3,000 foot extension to 10-28 was opened. [14]

[edit] Access to airport

[edit] Intra-airport transportation

Airport Transit System with Hilton Hotel in Background

Access within the airport complex can be accomplished using O'Hare's Airport Transit System (ATS), a 2.5 mi (4 km) long automated people mover system that operates 24 hours a day, connecting all four terminals and the remote parking lots. The system began its operation in 1993, and will be soon undergoing a US $90 million enhancement to add 24 new cars and to extend the line to a new remote parking garage.

[edit] Other facilities

A large air cargo complex on the southwest side of the field was opened in 1984, replacing most of the old cargo area, which stood where Terminal 5 now exists.

The hangar area has multiple buildings capable of fully enclosing aircraft up to the size of the Boeing 747.

[edit]