Raleigh–Durham International Airport

Raleigh–Durham International Airport (IATA: RDU, ICAO: KRDU, FAA LID: RDU), locally known by its IATA code RDU, is an international airport that serves Raleigh, Durham, and the surrounding Research Triangle region of North Carolina as its main airport. It is located in unincorporated Wake County, but is surrounded by the city of Raleigh to the north and east, and the towns of Cary and Morrisville to the south. The airport covers 5,000 acres (20 km2) and has three runways.[2][3]

Raleigh–Durham International Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorRaleigh–Durham Airport Authority
ServesThe Research Triangle Metropolitan Region of North Carolina
LocationCedar Fork Township, Wake County, North Carolina, U.S.
OpenedMay 1, 1943; 81 years ago (1943-05-01)
Focus city forDelta Air Lines
Operating base forAvelo Airlines
Elevation AMSL436 ft / 133 m
Coordinates35°52′40″N 078°47′15″W / 35.87778°N 78.78750°W / 35.87778; -78.78750
Websitewww.rdu.com
Maps
FAA airport diagram
FAA airport diagram
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
05L/23R 10,000 3,048 Concrete
05R/23L 7,500 2,286 Asphalt
14/32 3,570 1,088 Asphalt
05L/23R 10,639 3,243 Under Construction (Concrete)
Statistics (2023)
Total Passengers14,523,996
Aircraft movements216,081
Air Cargo (lbs.)202,642,566
Sources: RDU website[1]

As of 2024, RDU offers nonstop passenger service to over 70 destinations, including 11 international destinations over eight countries. There are more than 500 average daily aircraft movements.[4] The RDU Airport Authority is in charge of the airport facilities and operations and is controlled by a board of representatives from the counties of Wake and Durham and the cities of Raleigh and Durham.

Raleigh–Durham International Airport is the second-largest airport in the state of North Carolina, behind Charlotte Douglas International Airport. It is an operating base for Avelo Airlines and a focus city for Delta Air Lines.

In 2023, RDU served a record 14.5 million passengers which broke the airport's record of 14.2 million passengers set in 2019.[5]

History

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Founding

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Early view of Raleigh–Durham Airport

The region's first airport opened in 1929 as Raleigh Municipal Airport, south of town at 35°44′06″N 78°39′22″W / 35.735°N 78.656°W / 35.735; -78.656. It was quickly outgrown, and in 1939 the North Carolina General Assembly chartered the Raleigh–Durham Aeronautical Authority to build and operate a larger airport between Raleigh and Durham. This was promoted by Eastern Air Lines, led by then chairman Eddie Rickenbacker, who wanted to make RDU a stop on the airline's New York–Miami route.

The new Raleigh–Durham Airport opened on May 1, 1943, with flights by Eastern Airlines. The passenger terminal was built from materials remaining after the construction of four barracks for the Army Air Forces Air Technical Service Command airfield.[6] The three runways the airport had in 1951 are still visible on the southeast side of the airport: 4500-ft runway 5, 4500-ft runway 18 and 4490-ft runway 14.

After World War II, Capital Airlines joined Eastern at RDU; Piedmont Airlines arrived in 1948. The April 1957 Official Airline Guide shows 36 departures a day: twenty Eastern, eight Capital and eight Piedmont. Nonstop flights did not reach beyond Washington, Atlanta, or the Appalachians (but Eastern started a Super Constellation nonstop to Newark in 1958). The next airline (aside from United's takeover of Capital in 1961) was Delta Air Lines in 1970. In April 1969, nonstops didn't reach beyond New York or Atlanta, and Chicago was the only nonstop west of the Appalachians. RDU's first scheduled jets were Eastern 727s in 1965.

In the 1970s, the last decade before airline deregulation, Piedmont connected RDU to Charlotte, Greensboro, New Bern, Norfolk, Richmond, Rocky Mount, Washington, Wilmington and Winston-Salem.[7] United flew to Asheville, Charlotte, Huntsville and Newark,[8] while Eastern flew to Atlanta, Charlotte, Miami, New York, Philadelphia, Richmond and Washington,[9] and Delta flew to Chicago and Greensboro.[10]

After deregulation, Allegheny Airlines arrived in 1979, and by 1985 Trans World Airlines, American Airlines, Ozark Air Lines, People Express, New York Air and Pan Am had all put in appearances.

Hub years

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American built a terminal at RDU between 1985 and 1987 to house a new hub, and flew to 38 cities when the hub started in June 1987.[11] The December 1987 timetable shows AA nonstops to 36 airports and American Eagle prop nonstops to 18 more. American later flew to London-Gatwick and Paris-Orly.[12] The RDU hub operated at a loss even during its heyday in the early 1990s, like the hub AA had at Nashville.[13] American's December 1992 timetable, around the time of the hub's peak, showed 211 daily departures to 64 destinations, almost all in the eastern United States (the westernmost destinations being American's hubs at Dallas/Fort Worth and Chicago–O'Hare).[14] The hub faced intense competition from Delta and Eastern in Atlanta, Northwest in Memphis, and from USAir in Charlotte, as well as the short-lived Continental hub in Greensboro that opened in 1993.[15] American began to consider closing the hub in late 1993; operations were reduced until June 1995 when American closed the hub.[14][15]

American retained a daily nonstop flight to London, which continued to operate until the COVID-19 pandemic and resumed in 2022.[16][17][18] The RDU-London route was originally launched based on a purchasing commitment from GlaxoSmithKline, which has major offices at both ends of the route; however, the route is no longer dependent on GSK for revenue.[19]

Midway Airlines replaced AA as the airport's hub carrier from 1995 until 2003.[20] In 1995, Midway had flights to Boston, Hartford, Long Island, Newark, Newburgh, New York, Philadelphia and Washington in the Northeast, and to Fort Lauderdale, Jacksonville, Orlando, Tampa and West Palm Beach in Florida.[21] American subleased its gates at RDU to Midway in order to repay $113 million in American-guaranteed bonds which had been used to construct the hub facilities.[22] Midway suspended service for some time after the September 11, 2001 attacks, and ceased operations in 2002, filing for bankruptcy in 2003.

Recent history

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RDU Airport structure

RDU's post-hub years have brought the addition of new carriers and destinations, notably discount carriers such as Allegiant Air, Southwest Airlines and Frontier Airlines. Because of the economic downturn and high fuel prices in 2008, American ended most point to point flights it operated out of the airport. Several mainline flights were also dropped and service to other cities was reduced or downgraded. Other airlines also cut flights and destinations including United Airlines and US Airways. Also in 2008, the airport was modernized; the current rebuilt Terminal 2 opened, on the site of the old Terminal C that was built in 1987. The rebuilt was completed in 2011, and was designed by Fentress Architects.[23][24]

By 2010, RDU's traffic began to recover. In the first few months of the year, passenger numbers stabilized at RDU, ending the decrease the airport experienced in 2008 and 2009. In the first four months of 2010, 2.7 million passengers traveled through RDU.[25] Growth was flat compared to the same period a year before, but these signs were positive indicating that the decline was over. Airlines at RDU began to add new services to the schedule with both legacy and low-cost carriers significantly increasing service since the early 2010s.

Delta Air Lines maintains a focus city operation at RDU, which it decided to maintain in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic due to the area's strong economy and lack of a dominant network carrier.[26]

In November 2022, Avelo Airlines announced the opening of an operating base at Raleigh-Durham. Service started on February 15, 2023. Avelo currently operates two aircraft and around 90 employees at the airport.[27]

Future

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The Vision 2040 Master Plan details several major improvements that are aimed to be made by 2040. Proposed in 2017 by the RDU Airport Authority, the plan calls for major additions and renovations of current facilities at the airport. This includes the construction of a consolidated rental car facility, an on-site hotel, expansion of parking lots, expansion of both terminals, improvements to the taxiway layout, and the replacement of both runways. The proposal included lengthening runway 5R/23L to 9,000 feet (2,700 m) and rebuilding runway 5L/23R to a length of 11,500 feet (3,500 m) just northwest of its current position. The existing runway 5L/23R will become a taxiway for the new runway. After modifying the planned runway length multiple times, the FAA authorized the construction of the new runway on September 5, 2023.[28] The construction of RDU's new 5L/23R runway began on October 11, 2023. The new runway will be built at a length of 10,639 feet (3,243 m) and is anticipated to be finished in 5 years.[29]

In June 2023, the Airport Authority Board approved an agreement to advance the planning process for terminal 1 expansion to allow for future growth as RDU reached new passenger traffic records and destinations served. RDU is also planning on expanding their customs and border patrol center to accommodate for the increase of international flights at RDU.[30]

Facilities

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RDU Airport interior

Terminals

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The airport contains two terminals with a total of 45 gates.[31] The two terminals do not have an airside connection; passengers moving between the terminals may ride a shuttle bus or take the moving walkway through covered parking decks between the terminals. All non precleared international flights are processed in Terminal 2 and arrive into gates C21, C23, C24 and C25.

  • Terminal 1 contains 9 gates, A1–A9. The Vision2040 plan proposes the addition of 4, 7, 12 or 15 gates. The terminal is used by Alaska Airlines, Avelo Airlines, Breeze Airways, Southwest Airlines, Spirit Airlines, and Sun Country Airlines. In 2024, RDU moved three airlines in Terminal 2 to maximize check-in, gate space, and overall terminal space for airlines at Terminal 2.
  • Terminal 2 contains 36 gates, with concourses C and D. This is the only terminal at RDU that hosts international arrivals, utilizing gates C21 and C23–C25. Aeroméxico Connect, Air Canada, Air France, American Airlines, Copa Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Frontier Airlines, Icelandair, JetBlue, Lufthansa and United fly from Terminal 2.[31]

Cargo areas

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The airport incorporates two cargo areas, North Cargo and South Cargo.[32] The North Cargo terminal area is used by cargo airlines. The largest cargo operators are FedEx and UPS. The South Cargo terminal area is used by commercial airlines for cargo operations.

Airlines and destinations

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Passenger

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AirlinesDestinationsRefs
Aeroméxico Connect Mexico City[33] [34]
Air Canada Seasonal: Toronto–Pearson (resumes May 1, 2025) [35]
Air Canada Express Toronto–Pearson
Seasonal: Montréal–Trudeau
[36]
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle [37]
Alaska Airlines Seattle/Tacoma [38]
American Airlines Charlotte, Chicago–O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, London–Heathrow, Los Angeles, Miami, New York–LaGuardia, Philadelphia, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Washington–National
Seasonal: Cancún
[39]
American Eagle Chicago–O'Hare, Nashville, New York–JFK, New York–LaGuardia, Pittsburgh, Washington–National
Seasonal: Miami
[39]
Avelo Airlines Albany, Fort Myers, Manchester (NH), New Haven, Rochester (NY) [40]
BermudAirBermuda (begins April 11, 2025)[41] [42]
Breeze Airways Akron/Canton, Columbus–Glenn, Daytona Beach (begins February 13, 2025),[43] Hartford, Long Island/Islip, Los Angeles, Louisville (resumes February 21, 2025),[44] New Haven (begins February 7, 2025),[45] New Orleans, Pittsburgh, Providence, San Diego, Sarasota,[46] Tampa, West Palm Beach,[47] White Plains[48]
Seasonal: Burlington (VT),[49] Fort Myers, Jacksonville (FL), Portland (ME),[49] Syracuse[49]
[50]
Copa Airlines Panama City–Tocumen[51] [52]
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, Boston, Detroit, Fort Lauderdale, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Orlando, Salt Lake City, Seattle/Tacoma, Tampa
Seasonal: Cancún
[53]
Delta Connection Austin, Cincinnati, Nashville, Newark, New York–JFK, New York–LaGuardia, Washington–National [53]
Frontier Airlines Atlanta, Boston, Chicago–O'Hare, Cleveland, Denver, Miami, New York–LaGuardia, Orlando, Philadelphia, San Juan, Tampa
Seasonal: Buffalo, Chicago–Midway, Cincinnati, Dallas/Fort Worth, Detroit, Hartford, Houston–Intercontinental, Indianapolis, New Orleans, Pittsburgh,[54] Portland (ME), Syracuse
[55]
Icelandair Reykjavík–Keflavík [56]
JetBlue Boston, Fort Lauderdale, New York–JFK, San Juan [57]
Lufthansa Frankfurt[58] [59]
Southwest Airlines Atlanta, Austin, Baltimore, Chicago–Midway, Dallas–Love, Denver, Fort Lauderdale, Houston–Hobby, Nashville, Orlando, St. Louis, Tampa
Seasonal: Kansas City, Las Vegas, New Orleans, Phoenix–Sky Harbor
[60]
Spirit Airlines Fort Lauderdale [61]
Sun Country Airlines Seasonal: Minneapolis/St. Paul [62]
United Airlines Chicago–O'Hare, Denver, Houston–Intercontinental, Newark, San Francisco, Washington–Dulles [63]
United Express Houston–Intercontinental, Newark, Washington–Dulles
Seasonal: Chicago–O'Hare
[63]
WestJet Seasonal: Calgary (begins June 9, 2025) [64]
Destinations Maps
Northeast U.S. destinations from RDU. Red dots represent year-round destinations; Green dots represent seasonal destinations; Blue dots represent future destinations.
North America destinations from RDU (excludes domestic U.S.). Red dots represent year-round destinations; Green dots represent seasonal destinations; Blue dots represent future destinations.
European destinations from RDU. Red dots represent year-round destinations; Green dots represent seasonal destinations; Blue dots represent future destinations.

Cargo

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AirlinesDestinationsRefs
FedEx Express Charlotte, Indianapolis, Memphis
Seasonal: Atlanta, Greensboro, Harrisburg, Newark
FedEx Feeder New Bern, Jacksonville (NC), Wilmington (NC)
UPS Airlines Columbia, Louisville, Manteo/Dare County, New Bern, Ontario, Philadelphia, Wilmington (NC)
Seasonal: Atlanta, Charlotte, Edenton, Greensboro, Greenville/Spartanburg, Jacksonville (NC), Orlando
Quest Diagnostics Concord, Reading

Statistics

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Top destinations

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Busiest domestic routes from RDU (September 2023 – August 2024)[65]
Rank City Passengers Carriers
1   Atlanta, Georgia 710,550 Delta, Frontier, Southwest
2   Charlotte, North Carolina 524,680 American
3   Orlando, Florida 384,670 Delta, Frontier, JetBlue, Southwest
4   Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas 330,900 American, Frontier
5   Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois 313,630 American, Frontier, United
6   New York–LaGuardia, New York 306,330 American, Delta, Frontier
7   Denver, Colorado 300,010 Frontier, Southwest, United
8   New York–JFK, New York 293,160 American, Delta, JetBlue
9   Miami, Florida 287,590 American, Delta, Frontier
10   Boston, Massachusetts 278,900 Delta, Frontier, JetBlue
Busiest international routes from RDU (July 2023 – June 2024)[66]
Rank Airport Passengers % Change from Apr '23 - Mar '24 Ranking Carriers
1   London–Heathrow, United Kingdom 130,382   0.08%   American
2   Paris-Charles de Gaulle, France 110,522   4.57%   Air France, Delta
3   Toronto–Pearson, Canada 92,393   1.06%   Air Canada
4   Reykjavík–Keflavík, Iceland 65,742   9.04%   Icelandair
5   Cancún, Mexico 28,848   8.72% `   American, Delta, JetBlue
6   Montréal–Trudeau, Canada 15,826   8.92%   Air Canada
7   Frankfurt, Germany 7,574 N/A   Lufthansa
8   Freeport, Bahamas 2,943   39.78%   1 Bahamasair
9   Panama City-Tocumen, Panama 1,436 N/A   Copa Airlines
10   Mexico City, Mexico 160 N/A   Aeromexico
11   Hamilton, Bermuda Begins April 2025 N/A   BermudAir
12   Calgary, Canada Begins June 2025 N/A   WestJet

Annual traffic

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Annual passenger traffic at RDU airport. See Wikidata query.

Annual traffic at RDU

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Annual Passengers at RDU Enplaned and Deplaned 1985-Present[67]
Year Passengers Year Passengers Year Passengers Year Passengers
1985 2,771,009 1995 5,937,135 2005 9,303,904 2015 10,015,244
1986 3,100,002 1996 6,417,871 2006 9,432,925 2016 11,049,143
1987 4,854,073 1997 6,724,874 2007 10,037,424 2017 11,653,693
1988 7,352,007 1998 7,228,653 2008 9,715,928 2018 12,801,697
1989 8,594,671 1999 8,941,775 2009 8,973,398 2019 14,218,621
1990 9,265,665 2000 10,438,585 2010 9,101,920 2020 4,883,913
1991 9,381,586 2001 9,584,087 2011 9,161,279 2021 8,795,128
1992 9,925,364 2002 8,241,253 2012 9,220,391 2022 11,842,330
1993 9,695,886 2003 7,912,547 2013 9,186,748 2023 14,523,996
1994 8,999,491 2004 8,637,606 2014 9,545,360 2024

Airline market share

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Largest airlines at RDU (September 2023 – August 2024)[68]
Rank Airline Passengers Share
1 American Airlines 3,072,000 21.33%
2 Delta Air Lines 2,957,000 20.53%
3 Southwest Airlines 2,221,000 15.42%
4 United Airlines 1,491,000 10.36%
5 Frontier Airlines 1,240,000 8.61%
Other 3,420,000 23.73%

Accidents and incidents

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  • On January 2, 1953, a USAF Douglas C-47 crashed near RDU attempting to land with rain and low visibility after diverting from Pope AFB in Fayetteville. The aircraft crashed nearly two miles south of the airport in Crabtree Park. Three out of the four occupants died.[69]
  • On Wednesday, November 12, 1975, Eastern Air Lines Flight 576, a Boeing 727-225, crashed while attempting to land on runway 23 (now runway 23 Left). The aircraft hit the ground 282 feet (86 m) short of the runway and bounced back into the air before coming down on the runway and sliding 4,150 feet (1,260 m) down the runway, stopping where the south end of Terminal 1 is today. Of the 139 persons on the flight, eight were injured, one seriously. The NTSB investigation initially blamed the crash on "the pilot's failure to execute a missed approach when he lost sight of the runway environment in heavy rain below decision height." The accident report and probable cause were later revised to include the influence of undetected wind shear.[70] The aircraft (Boeing 727-225, N8838E) sustained major damage and was moved to an area on the north end of closed runway 18. A temporary structure was built around the aircraft which was eventually repaired and returned to service.
  • On December 31, 1986, a passenger aboard United Airlines Flight 1502 was wounded after a local hunter fired his rifle from the ground into the airframe of the landing aircraft. Robert Raymond Proulx, fired a bullet through the fuselage wounding a passenger (Barry Rollins) in the thigh and the cheek as the projectile ricocheted inside the cabin.[71][72][73]
  • On February 19, 1988, AVAir Flight 3378, a Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner was on a regularly scheduled flight between Raleigh and Richmond operating for American Eagle when it crashed into a reservoir about a mile from the airport in the vicinity of Cary. The aircraft had departed during low ceiling, low visibility and night conditions. Analysis of radar data indicated the aircraft was in a 45-degree descending turn. Both crew members and all 10 passengers were killed. It was revealed during the investigation that the pilot had complained of illness but decided to continue the flight.
  • On December 13, 1994, American Eagle Flight 3379 operated by AMR's regional airline Flagship Airlines,[74] a Jetstream 31 was on a regularly scheduled service of Raleigh–Greensboro–Raleigh when it crashed into a wooded area about 4 miles (6.4 km) SW of the airport, in the vicinity of Morrisville. Of the 20 onboard (18 passengers and two crewmembers) 15 were killed while the five survivors received serious injuries. The probable cause of the crash was the pilot not following proper procedure when it came to an engine failure situation.[75]
  • On July 31, 2000, a Win Win Aviation de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter crashed on approach nearly two miles SSW of RDU on a positioning flight due to fog and darkness. The pilot was not instrument rated to fly in bad weather. One crewmember out of the three occupants died.[76]
  • On October 20, 2019, a Piper PA-32 crashed in a wooded area of Umstead State Park on approach to runway 32. Both occupants of the plane died.[77]
  • On July 29, 2022, a CASA C-212 Aviocar from Raeford West Airport made an emergency landing and subsequently slid off runway 23L due to its lack of right landing gear. On approach, the 23-year old co-pilot, Charles Hew Crooks, exited the plane over Fuquay-Varina and subsequently died. The pilot was transported to the hospital with minor injuries as the result of a rough landing.[78][79]
  • On April 25, 2024, a Socata TBM 850 from Wilmington operated by UNC Air Operations crashed during landing on runway 32. The pilot and one passenger were both injured.[80]

See also

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References

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  This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

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