| Paine Field Airport Master Plan / Update |
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improvements that will be required to
accommodate future aviation demand.To get started exploring the Master Plan for Paine Field Snohomish County Airport, you may review the Executive Summary below. Links to the Master Plan's Table of Contents and accompanying documentation are provided here. FAR Part 150 Noise Exposure Maps Update in pdf* format (5,907 KB) can be reviewed here. |
Executive SummaryThe Master Plan Update for Paine Field has been prepared to assess and direct improvements that will be required to accommodate future aviation demand. The master planning process made use of a Study Advisory Committee to provide input concerning airport development issues, as well as a series of Public Information Meetings to provide an opportunity for interested citizens to understand and provide input into the process. Five Study Advisory Committee Meetings and four Public Information Meetings were held to gather input on the airport and establish a concept for future development at the airport from a broad range of interested parties. Throughout the planning process, the development of the Airport Master Plan Update was coordinated with Airport staff and the Federal Aviation Administration.Following the production of the Draft Report containing the Master Plan Update recommendations, a Public Information Meeting (open house), along with a Study Advisory Committee meeting was held on July 31, 2002. In addition, a briefing presentation was made to the Snohomish County Council to present airport development recommendations. Comments from all interested parties including the FAA, received during and following these meetings, were taken into consideration when final master planning documents were prepared. The draft long-term development plan for the airport is described in the following paragraphs and is graphically depicted on the CONCEPTUAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN illustration, and can be displayed by clicking the "DEVELOPMENT PLAN" button in lower left portion of this screen. Aviation Activity Forecasts The forecasting of future airport activity in terms of aircraft operations (landings and takeoffs), and based aircraft at Paine Field, serves as a significant basis for analyzing existing airport facilities and identifying future needs and requirements for these facilities. The FAA requires the use of unconstrained forecasts for airport planning documents; therefore, this Master Plan Update recognizes that Paine Field will continue to be an important general aviation airport with significant large aircraft manufacturing, maintenance, and repair facilities. In addition, because of population located in the vicinity of the airport, the driving time to Seattle-Tacoma Airport, and forecast population growth in the region, it can be assumed that some level of unconstrained demand exists for commercial passenger service at Paine Field. The Master Plan Update identifies the potential for moderate growth in general aviation (general aviation aircraft are primarily used by individuals and companies to support private, charter, and corporate activity) at the airport, as well as continuing to be a center for aircraft manufacturing and repair. To best understand the potential commercial passenger demand, four forecast scenarios were formulated. On July 25, 2001, the Snohomish County Council adopted the regional-low forecast scenario for use in this Airport Master Plan Update. The regional-low forecast for passenger enplanements (boardings) is the lowest of the four scenarios and is based on the assumption that, if actual demand occurs, the airport is most likely to accommodate passengers from a limited geographic area surrounding the airport (a thirty-minute drive time), and that routes flown out of the airport will have a regional focus (within a 500-mile range). The adopted passenger enplanement forecast assumptions used in this Master Plan Update are similar to those used in the 1995 Airport Master Plan for Paine Field and provide a scenario similar to Horizon Airlines recent proposal for Paine Field to Portland, Oregon service. A summary of the adopted unconstrained 20-year forecast is presented in the Executive Summary Brochure. Included in the table are projections related to the annual number of aircraft operations broken down by type, passenger enplanements, and based aircraft. Development Assumptions In concert with the status of the airport, some basic assumptions have been established in the Master Plan Update that are intended to direct the development of the airport in the future. These include: Assumption One. The airport will be developed and operated in a manner that is consistent with the Snohomish County Code, federal and state statutes, federal grant assurances, and Federal Aviation Administration regulations.Development Recommendations Because existing airport facilities are well configured to accommodate existing demand, the improvement recommendations contained in the Master Plan Update are not extraordinary. Rather, the improvements that will be needed over the next two decades will be focused on upgrades that will allow the airport to efficiently and safely accommodate anticipated aviation activity. AIRSIDE RECOMMENDATIONS: Runways. The existing runway system at Paine Field is adequate to accommodate existing and projected demand in terms of the number of operations and the runway lengths available. The main Runway (Runway 16R/34L) will be maintained to serve all aircraft types with a width of 150 feet and a length of 9,010 feet. The secondary runway and crosswind runway will continue to serve only small general aviation aircraft. Runway 16L/34R will maintain a width of 75 feet and a length of 3,000 feet, while the crosswind runway's (Runway 11/29) width will remain at 75 feet and its length at 4,504 feet.LANDSIDE RECOMMENDATIONS: The potential need for landside aviation-use facilities (aircraft parking aprons, hangars, terminal facilities, industrial aviation facilities, etc.) has been analyzed for both the short- and long-term (50 years). The long-term potential need, along with a determination of the areas of the airport that can feasibly be provided with taxiway access, was used as the basis for the formulation of a conceptual plan. The previously mentioned CONCEPTUAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN, details the types of future uses programmed for airport property.Development Program The details of the Development Program for the Paine Field Master Plan Update, including a capital improvement project list, project cost estimates, a proposed phasing of projects, and financial feasibility analysis were formulated following the refinement of the Conceptual Development Plan in light of comments received from County Management, the Study Advisory Committee, and as a result of input received at Public Information Meetings. In overview and summary, the long-term development program calls for the retention of the existing layout of facilities. The project list and phasing proposal provides for a Development Program that is divided into three phases: the first or short-range phase (0-5 years), the second or intermediate-range phase (5-10 years), and the third or long-range phase (10-20 years). Projects planned for each phase are to be implemented on an "as needed" basis. In addition to revenues generated on the airport, capital improvement funding sources identified include the Federal Aviation Administration and third-party private investment. PHASE I (0-5 YEARS) PROJECTS:
It should also be emphasized that projects represented as potentially needed in this Master Plan Update are based on forecast demand; only those projects that are required to meet actual demand will be proposed for construction. If demands do not increase as rapidly as anticipated, several of the proposed projects will be eliminated or delayed. Conversely, demand for facilities could occur earlier than anticipated. Certainly, the capital improvement financial implications of the project list detailed above are significant for Snohomish County and the FAA; yet, they are not unreasonable or unattainable for an airport facility like Paine Field, whose role is regionally, nationally, and internationally critical. |
Snohomish County Airport Paine Field
Table of Contents |
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