Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport Explained

Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport
Image2-Width:250
Iata:CVG
Icao:KCVG
Faa:CVG
Wmo:72421
Type:Public
Owner-Oper:CVG Airport Authority (formerly Kenton County Airport Board)
City-Served:Cincinnati metropolitan area
Location:2939 Terminal Drive
Boone County, Kentucky, U.S.
Opened:[1]
Focus City:Delta Air Lines[2]
Elevation-F:896
Elevation-M:273
Image Map Caption:FAA airport diagram
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Zoom:9
R1-Number:9/27
R1-Length-F:12,001
R1-Length-M:3,658
R1-Surface:Asphalt/Concrete
R2-Number:18C/36C
R2-Length-F:11,000
R2-Length-M:3,353
R2-Surface:Asphalt/Concrete
R3-Number:18L/36R
R3-Length-F:10,000
R3-Length-M:3,048
R3-Surface:Concrete
R4-Number:18R/36L
R4-Length-F:8,000
R4-Length-M:2,438
R4-Surface:Concrete
Stat-Year:2023
Stat1-Header:Total passengers
Stat1-Data:8,718,443
Stat2-Header:Aircraft operations
Stat2-Data:165,739
Stat3-Header:Total cargo (tons)
Stat3-Data:2,095,117
Footnotes:Source: CVG Airport[3]

Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport is a public international airport located in Boone County, Kentucky, United States, around the community of Hebron. The airport serves the Cincinnati tri-state area. The airport's code, CVG, is derived from the nearest city at the time of the airport's opening, Covington, Kentucky. The airport covers an area of 7000acres.[4] [5] It is included in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2023–2027, in which it is categorized as a medium-hub primary commercial service facility.[6]

Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport offers non-stop passenger service to over 50 destinations in North America and Europe,[7] handling numerous domestic and international cargo flights every day.[8] The airport is a cargo global hub for Amazon Air, Atlas Air, ABX Air, Kalitta Air, and DHL Aviation. The airport is currently the 6th busiest airport in the United States by cargo traffic and 12th largest in the world. CVG is the fastest-growing cargo airport in North America.[9] [10]

History

Beginnings

President Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration approved preliminary funds for site development of the Greater Cincinnati Airport on February 11, 1942. This was part of the United States Army Air Corps program to establish training facilities during World War II. At the time, air traffic in the area centered on Lunken Airport just southeast of central Cincinnati.[11] Lunken opened in 1926 in the Ohio River Valley; it frequently experienced fog, and the 1937 flood submerged its runways and two-story terminal building.[12] Federal officials wanted an airfield site that would not be prone to flooding, but Cincinnati officials hoped to build Lunken into the region's main airport.[13]

Officials from Boone, Kenton, and Campbell counties in Kentucky took advantage of Cincinnati's short-sightedness and lobbied Congress to build an airfield there.[14] Boone County officials offered a suitable site on the provision that Kenton County paid the acquisition cost. In October 1942, Congress provided $2 million to build four runways.[11]

The field opened August 12, 1944, with the first B-17 bombers beginning practice runs on August 15. As the tide of the war had already turned, the Air Corps only used the field until it was declared surplus in 1945.[11] However, this was not before the first regularly scheduled air freight shipment in the United States arrived in mid-September, signalling the future importance of the airport.[15]

On October 27, 1946, a small wooden terminal building opened and the airport prepared for commercial service under the name Greater Cincinnati Airport. Boone County Airlines was the first airline to provide scheduled service from the airport and had its headquarters at the airport.[11]

The first commercial flight, an American Airlines DC-3 from Cleveland, landed on January 10, 1947, at 9:53 am. A Delta Air Lines flight followed moments later.[16] The April 1957 Official Airline Guide shows 97 weekday departures: 37 American, 26 Delta, 24 TWA, 8 Piedmont, and 2 Lake Central. As late as November 1959 the airport had four 5500feet runways at 45-degree angles, the north–south runway eventually being extended into today's runway 18C/36C.

In the 1950s Cincinnati city leaders began pushing for expansion of a site in Blue Ash to both compete with the Greater Cincinnati Airport and replace Lunken as the city's primary airport.[17] The city purchased Hugh Watson Field in 1955, turning it into Blue Ash Airport.[18] The city's Blue Ash plans were hampered by community opposition, three failed Hamilton County bond measures,[19] political infighting,[20] and Cincinnati's decision not to participate in the federal airfield program.[21]

Jet age

On December 16, 1960, the jet age arrived in Cincinnati when a Delta Air Lines Convair 880 from Miami completed the first scheduled jet flight. The airport needed to expand and build more modern terminals and other facilities; the original Terminal A was expanded and renovated. The north–south runway was extended from 3100to. In 1964, the board approved a $12 million bond to expand the south concourse of Terminal A by 32000square feet and provide nine gates for TWA, American, and Delta.[11] A new east–west runway crossing the longer north–south runway was constructed in 1971 south of the older east–west runway.

In 1977, before the Airline Deregulation Act was passed, CVG, like many small airports, anticipated the loss of numerous flights; creating the opportunity for Patrick Sowers, Robert Tranter, and David and Raymound Mueller to establish Comair to fill the void. The airline began service to Akron/Canton, Cleveland, and Evansville. In 1981, Comair became a public company, added 30-seat turboprops to its fleet, and began to rapidly expand its destinations. In 1984, Comair became a Delta Connection carrier with Delta's establishment of a hub at CVG. That same year, Comair introduced its first international flights from Cincinnati to Toronto. In 1992, Comair moved into Concourse C, as Delta Air Lines gradually continued to acquire more of the airline's stock. In 1993, Comair was the launch customer for the Canadair Regional Jet, of which it would later operate the largest fleet in the world. By 1999, Comair was the largest regional airline in the country worth over $2 billion, transporting 6 million passengers yearly to 83 destinations on 101 aircraft. Later that year, Delta Air Lines acquired the remaining portion of Comair's stock, causing Comair to solely operate Delta Connection flights.[22]

In 1988, two founders of Comair, Patrick Sowers and Robert Tranter launched a new scheduled airline from CVG named Enterprise Airlines, which served 16 cities at its peak. The airline spearheaded the regional jet revolution in a unique manner by operating 10-seat Cessna Citation business jets in scheduled services. The flights became popular with Cincinnati companies. The airline served destinations including Baltimore, Boston, Cedar Rapids, Columbus (OH), Green Bay, Greensboro, Greenville, Hartford, Memphis, Milwaukee, New York–JFK, and Wilmington (NC).[23] The airline also became the first international feed carrier by feeding the British Airways Concorde at JFK. In 1991, the airline ceased operations because of high fuel prices and the suspension of the British Airways contract after the first Gulf War.

Delta Air Lines hub

In the mid-1980s, Delta opened a hub in Cincinnati and constructed Terminals C and D with 22 gates. During the decade, Delta ramped up both mainline and Comair operations and established Delta Connection. Delta's continued growth at CVG then prompted them to spend $550 million to build their own terminal facility in the 1990s.[24] The new terminal, known then as Terminal 3, opened in 1994 and would largely replace Terminal D. Terminal 3 consisted of three airside concourses, with most of Terminal D's gate space being repurposed into Terminal 3's Concourse A while Concourses B and C were new construction. Concourses A and B were parallel concourses connected to Terminal 3's main building by an underground walkway which also included a people mover (a similar layout to Delta's main hub at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport). Concourse C was only accessible by shuttle buses and was a ground-level facility for regional aircraft used by Delta Connection (operated by Comair). After the opening of Terminal 3, the former Terminals B and C were renamed Terminals 1 and 2 respectively, which continued to house non-Delta airlines.[25]

Aircraft operations dramatically increased from around 300,000 to 500,000 yearly aircraft movements. In turn, passenger volumes doubled within a decade from 10 million to over 20 million. This expansion prompted the building of runway 18L/36R and the airport began making preparations to construct Concourse D while adding an expansion to Concourse A and B.[26]

At its peak, CVG became Delta's second largest hub, handling over 600 flights daily in 2005. It was the fourth largest hub in the world for a single airline, based on departures, ranking only behind Atlanta, Chicago–O'Hare, and Dallas/Fort Worth.[27] The hub served everything from a 64-mile flight to Dayton, to a daily nonstop to Honolulu and Anchorage, to transatlantic destinations including Amsterdam, Brussels, Frankfurt, London, Manchester, Munich, Paris, Rome, and Zürich.[28] Additionally, Air France operated flights into CVG for several periods for over a decade before finally terminating the service in 2007.[29] [30]

When Delta went into bankruptcy in September 2005, a large reduction at CVG eliminated most early-morning and night flights.[28] These initial cuts caused additional routes to become unprofitable, causing the frequency of low-volume routes to be further cut from 2006 to 2007. Planning for the new east–west runway stopped, along with all expansions to current terminals; Terminal 1 was closed due to lack of service. In 2008, Delta merged with Northwest Airlines and cut flight capacity from the Cincinnati hub by 22 percent with an additional 17 percent reduction in 2009.[31] Concourse C, opened in 1994 at a cost of $50 million, was permanently closed in 2008 and demolished in 2016.[32] Further reductions in early 2010 caused Delta to close Concourse A in Terminal 3 on May 1, consolidating all operations into Concourse B. This resulted in the layoff of more than 800 employees.[33]

By 2011, Delta was down to roughly 130 flights per day at CVG.[34] After several years of cuts to its older fleet, which were cited as being cut due to high costs associated with rising oil prices, Delta's wholly-owned and CVG-based subsidiary, Comair, ceased all operations in September 2012, ending over three decades of operations.[35] In 2017, the hub was downgraded to a focus city.[36]

Recent history

Until 2015, CVG consistently ranked among the most expensive major airports in the United States.[37] Delta operated over 75% of flights at CVG, a fact often cited as a reason for relatively high domestic ticket prices.[38] Airline officials suggested that Delta was practicing predatory pricing to drive away discount airlines.[39] From 1990 to 2003, ten discount airlines began service at CVG, but later pulled out,[40] including Vanguard Airlines, which pulled out of CVG twice.[41] After Delta downsized its hub operations, low cost carriers began operations and have been sustained at the airport ever since.[42] [43]

Terminal 2 was closed in May 2012, and CVG re-opened and consolidated all non-Delta airlines to Concourse A in Terminal 3 at that time, which became the sole terminal.[44] Renovation and expansion of the ticketing/check-in area and Concourse A took place that year to accommodate the move.[45] [46] Terminals 1 and 2 were torn down in early 2017 to construct an overnight parking and deicing area.[47] Both concourses, the customs facility, baggage claim, and ticketing areas were renovated in late 2017 to mid 2018 under a $4.5 million plan.[48] [49] In 2021, the airport opened a new rental car and ground transportation center adjacent to the main terminal.[50]

Location

The airport is in an unincorporated area of the county.[51] Various articles of the Cincinnati Enquirer describe the airport as being in Hebron.[52] [53] The airport terminal uses a Hebron postal address, while the administrative headquarters uses an Erlanger postal address.[54] The airport is outside of the Hebron census-designated place, which is defined by the U.S. Census Bureau, and the airport is also not in Erlanger, a city.[51]

The office, at 77 Comair Boulevard, was formerly the headquarters of the American regional airline Comair.[55]

Facilities

Terminal

The airport has one terminal and two concourses with a total of 51 gates.[56] Both concourses are islands and are only accessible by an underground moving walkway and people mover.[57] All international arrivals without pre-clearance are handled in Concourse B.

Art

See main article: Winold Reiss industrial murals. The airport is home to 14 large Art Deco murals created for the train concourse building at Cincinnati Union Terminal during the station's construction in 1932. Mosaic murals depicting people at work in local Cincinnati workplaces were incorporated into the interior design of the railroad station by Winold Reiss, a German-born artist with a reputation in interior design. When the train concourse building was designated for demolition in 1972, a "Save the Terminal Committee" raised funds to remove and transport the 14 murals in the concourse to new locations in the Airport. They were placed in Terminal 1, as well as Terminals 2 and 3, which were then being constructed as part of major airport expansion and renovation. When Terminals 1 and 2 were demolished, the murals in those areas were stored and the new Security Screening building was designed to accommodate the heavy weight of the murals with the eastern "store front" windows designed to be removable to permit the future installation of the murals. The murals were also featured in a scene in the film Rain Man starring Dustin Hoffman and Tom Cruise. In addition, a walkway to one of the terminals at CVG was featured in the scene in the film when Hoffman's character, Raymond, refused to fly on a plane. The nine murals located in the former Terminals 1 & 2 were relocated to the Duke Energy Convention Center in downtown Cincinnati.[58]

Additionally, there are several pieces of Charley Harper artwork in the Concourse B food court.

Cargo hubs

In 1984, DHL opened its CVG hub and began operations throughout the world. However, in 2004, DHL decided to move its hub to Wilmington, Ohio, The plan ended up failing, and DHL moved back to CVG in 2009 to resume its original operations. CVG now serves as the largest of DHL's three global hubs (the other two being Leipzig/Halle and Hong Kong) with numerous flights each day to destinations across North America, Europe, Middle East, Asia, and the Pacific. DHL has completed a $105 million expansion and employs approximately 2,500 at CVG. Because of this growth, CVG now stands as the 4th busiest airport in North America based on cargo tonnage and 34th in the world.[59] On May 28, 2015, DHL announced a $108M expansion to its current facility, which doubled the current cargo operations. The money was used to double the gate capacity for transferring cargo, an expansion to the sorting facility, and various technical improvements, which was completed in Autumn 2016. In addition, this has provided many more jobs for the Cincinnati area, and will dramatically increase the airport's operations.[60] [61]

On January 31, 2017, Amazon announced that its new cargo airline, Amazon Air would pick CVG as its main worldwide shipping hub, following an investment of $1.49B in the construction and expansion of a cargo facility on the airport grounds.[62] The company used DHL's facilities prior to the construction of its new facility. The hub is Amazon's principal shipping hub and was constructed on of land at the airport with a sorting facility and parking positions for over 100 aircraft. On April 30, 2017, Amazon began operations at CVG with 75 Boeing 767-200ER/300ER aircraft based at the airport and planned to have 200 daily takeoffs and landings from its CVG hub to destinations across the U.S. and internationally.[63] The hub could create up to 15,000 jobs in the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky region.[64] On August 11, 2021, Amazon debuted its new cargo hub at CVG. On May 28, 2024, Atlas announced that "Atlas Air has successfully reached an agreement to fully exit their Amazon CMI operations, which no longer aligned with our company plans. Separately, through Titan, we are pleased to extend the dry leasing portion of our relationship with Amazon."

Ground transportation

The TANK 2X bus provides daily service in to downtown Cincinnati.[65]

Airlines and destinations

Cargo

Statistics

Top destinations

Busiest domestic routes from CVG (May 2023 - April 2024)!Rank! City! Passengers! Carriers
1Atlanta, Georgia411,000Delta, Frontier
2Denver, Colorado281,000Allegiant, Delta, Frontier, Southwest, United
3Orlando, Florida268,000Delta, Frontier, Southwest
4Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas250,000American, Frontier
5Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois203,000American, United
6Charlotte, North Carolina165,000American
7Newark, New Jersey145,000Allegiant, Delta, United
8Tampa, Florida142,000Delta, Frontier
9Las Vegas, Nevada137,000Allegiant, Delta, Frontier
10New York–LaGuardia, New York129,000American, Delta
Busiest cargo routes from CVG (January 2019)[66] !Rank! City! Cargo (pounds)! Carriers
1Anchorage, Alaska38,686,878AirBridgeCargo, DHL
2Leipzig/Halle, Germany14,447,211AirBridgeCargo, DHL
3Miami, Florida14,427,248Amazon, American, DHL
4Chicago–O'Hare, Illinois10,341,326Amazon, American, Delta, DHL, United
5Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas8,819,609Amazon, American, Delta, DHL
6Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Arizona8,431,588Amazon, Delta, DHL
7Brussels, Belgium8,223,096AirBridgeCargo, DHL
8Guadalajara, Mexico7,990,928AeroUnion, Cargojet, DHL
9Houston, Texas7,066,885Amazon, Delta, DHL, United

Airline market share

Largest Airlines at CVG
(May 2023 - April 2024)
[67]
RankAirlinePassengersShare
1Delta Air Lines2,063,00024.24%
2Frontier Airlines1,251,00014.70%
3Allegiant Air995,00011.69%
4Endeavor Air839,0009.86%
5American Airlines783,0009.20%

Annual traffic

Annual passenger traffic at CVG
1992–Present
[68] [69] ! Year !! Passengers !! Year !! Passengers !! Year !! Passengers !! Year !! Passengers
199211,545,682200220,812,64220126,038,81720227,573,416
199312,213,874200321,197,44720135,718,25520238,718,443
199413,593,522200422,062,55720145,908,71120245,433,966 (YTD)
199515,181,728200522,778,78520156,316,3322025
199618,795,766200616,244,96220166,773,9052026
199719,866,308200715,736,22020177,842,1492027
199821,124,216200813,630,44320188,865,5682028
199921,753,512200910,621,65520199,103,5542029
200022,406,38420107,977,58820203,615,1392030
200117,270,47520117,034,26320216,282,2532031

Accidents and incidents

See also

References

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CVG Airport Marks 75th Anniversary with Year-Long Celebration. cvgairport.com. 10 January 2022. CVG Leadership. 12 January 2022.
  2. Web site: Russell . Edward . Delta’s Expansion in Austin May Be Too Little, Too Late to Catch American and Southwest . Airline Weekly . July 11, 2023.
  3. Web site: 2022 CVG Air Traffic Stats. cvgairport.com.
  4. Effective August 8, 2024
  5. Web site: CVG Airport Data at SkyVector. skyvector.com. July 30, 2024.
  6. Web site: NPIAS Report 2023-2027 Appendix A . . March 15, 2024 . October 6, 2022 . 54.
  7. Web site: CVG Fact Sheet October 2020 . 13 January 2021.
  8. Web site: Amazon, DHL key in new CVG strategy to land development . 2 June 2018.
  9. Web site: Cincinnati, OH: Cincinnati/ Northern Kentucky International (CVG). Bureau of Transportation Statistics. May 2017. May 11, 2018.
  10. Web site: Launching Point 2017: A Year in Review. 5 February 2018.
  11. Web site: Detailed History. cvgairport.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101204233340/http://www.cvgairport.com/about/history2.html . December 4, 2010 . October 31, 2013.
  12. Web site: Lunken Airport. Larry. Stulz. Cincinnati-Transit.net. February 14, 2008.
  13. News: Flood sank Lunken plans. Cincinnati Enquirer-Our History. Cincinnati.com. Steve Kemme. December 28, 2010. October 31, 2013. December 29, 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20101229164922/http://cincinnati.com/blogs/ourhistory/2010/12/28/flood-sank-lunken-plans/. dead.
  14. Web site: MTM Cincinnati: Why Is Cincinnati Airport In Kentucky?. Edged in Blue. 27 September 2010.
  15. News: Aerial Freight Skips Lunken in Fog, Lands at Kenton . Cincinnati Post . 15 September 1944 . 30.
  16. News: Cincinnati's Century of Change: Timeline . Donna M. DeBlasio . John Johnston. The Cincinnati Enquirer. enquirer.com. July 31, 1999. S3 . October 31, 2013.
  17. On the Waterfront. Oliver. Gale. Cincinnati Magazine. CM Media. November 1993. 27. 2. 75–76. 0746-8210.
  18. News: Letter to the Editor: History of Blue Ash Airport is important. Mary Lou. Rose. The Cincinnati Enquirer. March 22, 2012. January 20, 2013. February 15, 2013. https://archive.today/20130215172217/http://cincinnati.com/blogs/letters/2012/03/22/history-of-blue-ash-airport-is-important/. dead.
  19. Web site: Renaissance in '70s led to place among 'Fab 50'. Cincinnati.com. May 9, 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080509163632/http://homefinder.cincinnati.com/closetohome/cth_blueash_011397.html.
  20. News: Council votes to sell airport land. Joe. Wessels. The Cincinnati Post. October 26, 2006. A2. Cincinnati City Council voted 8-1 Wednesday for an agreement to sell 128 acres of the approximately 230-acre airport to the city of Blue Ash.... The city of Cincinnati purchased the airport, located six air miles northeast of Cincinnati, in 1946 from a private company that had been using it as an airfield since 1921. Cincinnati officials intended to use the land to build a new commercial airport after 1937 Flood completely submerged Lunken Field in the East End, then the only airport with commercial flights in the area. A series of failed bond issues and political infighting – and Northern Kentucky politicians' successes at securing federal funding – wound up with the region's major airport being developed in Boone County..
  21. Web site: From Humble Beginnings... to an International Hub. Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. December 12, 2012. January 20, 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20101204233340/http://www.cvgairport.com/about/history2.html. December 4, 2010. mdy-all.
  22. Web site: Nonstop Performance Since 1977. Departed Flights. Comair. 29 December 2015.
  23. Web site: Enterprise Airlines. 28 December 2016.
  24. Web site: The Death and Rebirth of Memphis (MEM) and Cincinnati (CVG) . AirlineGeeks . 2 April 2022.
  25. Web site: Cincinnati/Northern KentuckyInternational Airport (CVG) . Cincinnati Transit . 23 June 2023.
  26. Web site: CVG 2025 Master Plan . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304075930/http://www.airportsites.net/cvgpart150mpu/documents/CVG%20MPU%20022007%20FinalDraft.pdf . 8 August 2020. 2016-03-04 .
  27. Web site: New Delta hub plan in wings. 15 February 2016.
  28. Web site: Why CVG lost half of all flights. 2015-05-28.
  29. News: Air France Suspends Paris Flight. https://web.archive.org/web/20121106045004/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-75465884.html. dead. November 6, 2012. The Cincinnati Post. June 8, 2001. October 31, 2013.
  30. News: Air France Starts New Daily Service in Cincinnati . October 31, 2013 . July 15, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150715213506/http://www.itravelmag.com/travel-articles/air-france-daily-flights-cincinnati/ . dead .
  31. News: Kelly Yamanouchi. Atlanta Journal-Constitution. ajc.com. Cincinnati hub is shrinking. August 2, 2009. August 2, 2009.
  32. News: Jason Williams. Cincinnati Enquirer. cincinnati.com. CVG saying goodbye to Concourse C. March 4, 2016.
  33. News: Delta further reduces operations at Cincinnati hub; 840 face layoffs. March 16, 2010. Associated Press. Cleveland Plain Dealer . October 31, 2013.
  34. News: Hub changes hit Cincinnati hard. Kelly. Yamanouchi. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution . AJC.com.
  35. Web site: Comair to Cease Operations. July 28, 2012. July 27, 2012.
  36. Web site: Delta announces new routes from Cincinnati 'focus city' . . 26 March 2022.
  37. News: Cincinnati's sky-high airfares are tops in the USA. Alexander. Coolidge. The Cincinnati Enquirer. January 3, 2007. A8 . October 31, 2013.
  38. News: Governors push to keep Delta hub. Marla Matzer. Rose. The Columbus Dispatch. January 27, 2008. October 31, 2013. November 3, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131103125506/http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/business/2008/01/27/airline_mergers.ART_ART_01-27-08_D1_24957SP.html. dead.
  39. News: High air fares getting attention. Paul Barton. The Cincinnati Enquirer. Cincinnati.com. December 20, 1999 . October 31, 2013.
  40. News: Curse of high fares has economic upside. James. Pilcher. The Cincinnati Enquirer. November 23, 2003 . October 31, 2013.
  41. News: Discount Airline Passes on CVG. Kerry. Duke. The Kentucky Post. November 30, 2006. A1 . October 31, 2013.
  42. Web site: Allegiant Air makes CVG a home, creates jobs. July 23, 2015. July 24, 2015. Allegiant Air makes CVG a home, creates jobs. Cincinnati.com. Williams. Jason.
  43. Web site: CVG doesn't suck anymore. How did that happen? . 3 August 2017 . 8 August 2020.
  44. Web site: Ground Control . May 2013 . 8 August 2020.
  45. Web site: 2022-11-12. CVG's new Concourse A: SLIDESHOW. www.bizjournals.com.
  46. Web site: Dan. Wells. 2022-11-12. Newly renovated CVG concourse A opens. www.fox19.com. 14 May 2012 .
  47. Web site: CVG to demolish Concourse. February 2, 2017.
  48. Web site: CVG plans multimillion-dollar upgrade. July 8, 2017.
  49. Web site: Master Plan Report. cvgairport.com. May 19, 2015.
  50. Web site: CVG opens new rental car and ground transportation center . 20 October 2021 . 15 February 2022.
  51. Web site: 2020 CENSUS - CENSUS BLOCK MAP: Boone County, KY. U.S. Census Bureau. 6 (PDF p. 7/15). 2023-08-08. Cincinnati/northern Kentucky International Arprt. - See also: Map of the Hebron CDP
  52. Web site: Travel slows at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. Cincinnati Enquirer. 2020-03-18. 2023-08-08.
  53. Web site: A look inside the Amazon Air Hub at CVG . 2023-12-31 . The Enquirer . en-US.
  54. Web site: Contact. Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. 2023-08-08. Terminal Location: 3087 Terminal Drive, Hebron, KY 41048 [...] Office Location: 77 Comair Blvd, Erlanger, KY 41018.
  55. "CVG board approves lease deal for Southern Air." Business Courier. Tuesday July 17, 2012. Retrieved on July 30, 2012. "[...]77 Comair Blvd.[...]to the building that formerly housed Comair’s headquarters."
  56. Web site: CVG Terminal Map . 8 January 2024.
  57. Web site: Step by Step Directions . 25 December 2020.
  58. Web site: Long hidden at CVG, murals closer to coming home. May 19, 2015. Cincinnati.com.
  59. Web site: stats . cvgairport.com . 2014-09-25 . 2014-09-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140912225024/http://www.cvgairport.com/docs/default-source/leadership/cvg-2014.pdf?sfvrsn=0 . dead .
  60. Web site: DeMio. Terry. DHL to expand at CVG due to e-commerce growth. Cincinnati.com. 28 May 2015.
  61. Web site: RITA | BTS | Transtats . Transtats.bts.gov . 2022-08-27.
  62. Web site: Amazon adds 200 ac for its CVG air hub. 13 January 2018.
  63. Web site: Amazon to create $1.5B air hub at CVG . 31 January 2017.
  64. Web site: 3 November 2017 . Experts: Amazon Prime Air could bring up to 15K jobs over time . 4 November 2017.
  65. https://www.tankbus.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/2x_08122023.pdf 2X Airporter
  66. Web site: Cincinnati, OH: Cincinnati/ Northern Kentucky International (CVG). Bureau of Transportation Statistics. January 2019. July 23, 2019.
  67. Web site: Cincinnati, OH: Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International (CVG). Bureau of Transportation Statistics. 10 January 2020.
  68. Web site: CVG 2025 Master Plan. cvgairport.com. CVG Airport. 12 November 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160105130559/http://www.airportsites.net/cvgpart150mpu/documents/CVG%20MPU%20022007%20FinalDraft.pdf. 5 January 2016. dead.
  69. Web site: News & Stats . 27 November 2019.
  70. Web site: Accident description for N93211 at Aviation Safety Network. aviationsafetynetwork.org. July 22, 2024.
  71. Web site: Accident description for N999B at Aviation Safety Network. aviationsafetynetwork.org. July 22, 2024.
  72. Web site: Accident description for N30061 at Aviation Safety Network. aviationsafetynetwork.org. July 22, 2024.
  73. Web site: Accident description for N1996 at Aviation Safety Network. aviationsafetynetwork.org. July 22, 2024.
  74. Web site: Accident description for N742TW at Aviation Safety Network. aviationsafetynetwork.org. July 22, 2024.
  75. Web site: Accident description for N821TW at Aviation Safety Network. aviationsafetynetwork.org. July 22, 2024.
  76. Web site: Accident description for N6642L at Aviation Safety Network. aviationsafetynetwork.org. July 22, 2024.
  77. Web site: Iad80Flq04. www.ntsb.gov . https://web.archive.org/web/20121011213359/https://www.ntsb.gov/aviationquery/brief.aspx?ev_id=35405&key=0 . October 11, 2012.
  78. Web site: Accident description for C-FTLU at Aviation Safety Network. aviationsafetynetwork.org. July 22, 2024.
  79. Web site: Accident description for N586P at Aviation Safety Network. aviationsafetynetwork.org. July 22, 2024.