Miami International Airport (IATA Airport Code: MIA, ICAO Airport Code: KMIA), is located in unincorporated Miami, Florida between the suburbs of Hialeah, Doral, Fontainbleau, and Miami Springs. It has flights to airports throughout the United States, Canada, Latin America, The Caribbean, and Western Europe. Along with Atlanta's Hartsfield International Airport, MIA is one of the largest aerial gateways into the American South. The airport has long enjoyed such a lofty status because of Miami's proximity to tourist attractions, local economic growth, and large Latin American and European populations.
Gulfstream International Airlines operates regular flights between MIA and several airports in Cuba, the only commercial air links between the two countries. However, these flights must be booked through agents with special authorization from the Office of Foreign Assets Control, and are only generally available to government officials, journalists, researchers, professionals attending conferences, or expatriates visiting Cuban family.
In 1945, the City of Miami established a Port Authority and raised bond revenue to purchase the airport, now known as 36th Street Airport, from Pan Am. It was merged with an adjoining Army airfield in 1949 and expanded further in 1951. The old terminal on 36th Street was closed in 1959 when the modern passenger terminal (since greatly expanded) opened for service.
Pan Am and Eastern remained Miami's main tenants until 1991, when both carriers went bankrupt. Their hubs at MIA were taken over by United Airlines and American Airlines. United slowly trimmed down its Miami operation through the 1990s, and eventually shut down its crew base and other operations facilities in Miami. At the same time, American expanded its presence at the airport, winning new routes to Latin America and transferring employees and equipment from its failed domestic hubs at Nashville and Raleigh-Durham. Today, Miami is American's largest air freight hub, and forms the main connecting point in the airline's north-south oriented international route network.
For many years, the airport was a common connecting point for passengers traveling from Europe to Latin America. However, stricter visa requirements for aliens in transit (a result, in part, of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks) have lessened MIA's role as an intercontinental connecting hub. In 2004, Iberia Airlines ended its hub operation in Miami, opting instead to run more direct flights from Spain to Central America.
Current diagram of Miami International Airport, reflecting the ongoing construction of the American and Star Alliance concourses
The main terminal at MIA is semicircular and has eight pier-shaped concourses, lettered A through H in a counter-clockwise direction. Ticketing and departures are located on the upper level: immigration and baggage carousels are located on the lower level. Each gate can route arriving passengers to the main level (for domestic arrivals) or to the immigration halls downstairs (for international arrivals). Concourse E has a third-floor people mover that transports passengers to a satellite terminal.
A parking garage is located inside the terminal's curvature, and is connected to the terminal by overhead walkways. There is a heliport on top.
At present, the terminal is being dramatically altered. Concourses A, B, C, and D, which primarily house American's flights, are being merged into a single linear concourse. Portions of the new concourse have already been built as extensions of concourses A and D: concourses B and C will eventually be demolished to accommodate the new pier. The merged complex is slated to be called the "North Terminal." The remaining "South Terminal", consisting of concourses E through H, will also be expanded. Another new concourse, Concourse J, is under construction with the support of fifteen Star Alliance and SkyTeam carriers: it will be seven stories tall and have fifteen gates, with a total floor area of 1.3 million square feet (120,000 m²) including space for airline lounges and offices. American plans to use the old portion of the South Terminal to handle overflow from the North Terminal. Although this construction was originally slated for completion by 2005, it now appears more likely that the opening will be delayed until 2006 because of the ongoing need for security upgrades and other capital improvements.
Airlines at MIA
Note: This list contains Airline Check-in Counter locations at MIA. Some airlines may have a counter at one concourse and have their flights depart out of another.
- For Example: AirTran uses gates G2 and G4, but have counters in Concourse F.
American Airlines (International) (Belize City, Bogota, Buenos Aires, Cali, Cancun, Caracas, Guatemala City, Guayaquil, La Paz, Lima, London Heathrow, Madrid, Managua, Manchester, Maracaibo, Medellin, Mexico City, Montevideo, Quito, Panama City, Paris Charles de Gaulle, Rio de Janeiro, San Salvador, Sao Paolo, Santiago (Chile), and Tegucigalpa)
Concourse D
American Airlines (First Class/Carribean/Domestic) (Atlanta, Aruba, Barbados, Baltimore/Washington, Bermuda, Bogota, Boston, Charlotte, Chicago O'Hare, Cleveland, Curaçao, Dallas/Fort Worth, Denver, Detroit, Grand Cayman, Hartford, Houston Intercontinental, Indianapolis, Kingston, La Romana, Las Vegas, Liberia (Costa Rica), Los Angeles, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Montegomery, Montreal, New Orleans, New York Kennedy, New York LaGuardia, Nashville, Newark, Orlando, Philadelphia, Port au Prince, Port of Spain, Providenciales, Puerto Plata, Punta Cana, Raleigh/Durham, St. Croix, St. Kitts, St. Louis, St. Lucia, St. Maarten, St. Thomas, San Francisco, San Jose (C.R.), San Juan, San Pedro Sula, Santiago (Dom. Rep.), Santo Domingo, Tampa, Tegucigalpa, Toronto, Washington Dulles, Washington Reagan)
Concourse E
Concourse E is divided into two sections: a pier concourse, called "low E," and a satellite terminal, called "high E." Low E is mostly used by American Airlines; high E is used by other carriers.