Pullman–Moscow Regional Airport Explained

Pullman–Moscow Regional Airport
Iata:PUW
Icao:KPUW
Faa:PUW
Type:Public
Owner:Pullman–Moscow Regional Airport Board
City-Served:Pullman-Moscow Combined Statistical Area
Location:Whitman County, Washington
Timezone:Pacific Standard
Utc:UTC−8
Summer:Pacific Daylight
Utcs:UTC−7
Elevation-F:2567
Pushpin Map:Washington#USA
Pushpin Relief:yes
Pushpin Mapsize:250
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Washington##Location in the United States
Pushpin Label:PUW
Coordinates:46.744°N -117.108°W
R1-Number:5/23
R1-Length-F:7101
R1-Surface:Asphalt
Stat1-Header:Aircraft operations (2014)
Stat1-Data:29,350
Stat2-Header:Based aircraft (2018)
Stat2-Data:71
Stat3-Header:Total passengers
Stat3-Data:119,000
Footnotes:Source: Federal Aviation Administration[1]

Pullman–Moscow Regional Airport is a public airport in the northwest United States, located in Whitman County, Washington, 2miles east of Pullman, Washington and 4miles west of Moscow, Idaho. The airport is near State Route 270, and has a single 7101feet runway, headed northeast–southwest (5/23), which entered service in October 2019.[2] [3] [4] [5] The former runway (6/24) was 6730feet and aligned with Moscow Mountain 12miles to the northeast, the highest summit in the area.

The rural airport in the Palouse region is the primary air link for its two land-grant universities, Washington State University in Pullman and the University of Idaho in Moscow.[6] In addition to scheduled service from Alaska Airlines (through its Horizon Air subsidiary), both universities use the airport for jet charters for their intercollegiate athletic teams.

Seattle air traffic control, 250miles west, manages commercial traffic for the airport. The nearest major airport is Spokane International, approximately 90miles to the north, and Lewiston is about south.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2017–2021 categorized the airport as a non-hub primary commercial service facility.[7]

History

Aviation at the site began in the 1920s as a grass strip, which was later improved by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and Works Progress Administration (WPA); the runway was first paved in 1946.

Horizon Air (marketed and sold as Alaska Airlines) is the sole commercial airline serving the airport, flying Embraer 175 jet aircraft. Its limited service to Pullman–Moscow began in December 1981 with Fairchild F-27 aircraft (Friday & Sunday),[8] and daily service (along with Lewiston) in March 1983, on F-27 and Metroliner aircraft.[9] [10] [11] Service to Portland, Spokane, and Boise was ended in 1997.[12] [13] [14]

Horizon (later folded into the Alaska brand) now offers four to five daily scheduled flights to Seattle–Tacoma. Historically, flight schedules had sometimes included a stop at Lewiston, but currently all scheduled flights to Seattle are non-stop. Flights to Boise returned August 2021 with service five times a week; it was suspended in May 2024 and is scheduled to return in August due to a lack of demand outside of the school year. Alaska moved to all-jet service to Pullman–Moscow in November 2022, replacing Q400 turboprops with Embraer 175 jets.[15]

Prior to Horizon, Cascade Airways (1969–1986) was the main carrier at the airport,[16] starting Palouse service in late 1971,[17] and had over 16,500 boardings at Pullman–Moscow in 1977.[18] Hughes Airwest supplied service in the early 1970s,[19] [20] and United Express for over two years, from May 1988 to September 1990.[21]

Facilities and aircraft

Pullman–Moscow Regional Airport covers an area of 467acres at an elevation of 2567feet above sea level. It has one asphalt paved runway designated 5/23, which opened in October 2019 and measures 7101feetx100feetft (xft).

The airport was annexed by the City of Pullman in August 1988,[22] and ground was broken in April 1989 to replace the small, outdated passenger terminal of 1957.[23] [24] [25] Constructed in under ten months, the present 8000square feet terminal opened in February 1990 at a cost of $2.7 million,[26] with a formal dedication and airshow in May.[27]

The former commercial terminal was a single large room, divided between pre- and post-security areas by a single security checkpoint and glass walls. The waiting area occupied all space beyond the checkpoint but was not commonly used for waiting, as most passengers passed through the security checkpoint immediately before boarding. Both passenger gates were ground-level doors to the tarmac; passengers boarded via the fold-down aircraft-door stairs, or airstairs (for larger charter aircraft). Gate 1 on the east side of the terminal was used by Horizon Air. A vending machine in the terminal's pre-security area sold canned local Cougar Gold cheese made by the nearby Washington State University.[28]

A new and significantly larger terminal opened to the west of the old terminal on May 22, 2024, at a cost of $92 million to construct. The terminal building is 47000square feet and includes three jet bridges, a new baggage carousel, new restaurant and outdoor spaces, as well as a separate space for university charters. It was developed alongside runway adjustments that had taken seven years to plan; an expansion with an additional 5000square feet opened on August 15, 2024.[29] [30] Construction of the new terminal began in August 2022 and was completed in December 2023.[31] [32] The security area has a larger queueing area, a TSA PreCheck entrance, and additional screening equipment.[33]

The public airport shares the runway with a fixed-base operator, Interstate Aviation, which conducts chartered air service and flight school. Local engineering firm Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories owns and operates private hangars at the airport.

For the 12-month period ending January 1, 2014, the airport had 29,350 aircraft operations, an average of 80 per day: 85% general aviation, 14% scheduled commercial, 1% air taxi, and <1% military. Occasionally, the airport has accepted Boeing 737 aircraft on Alaska Airlines charter flights. In January 2018, there were 71 aircraft based at this airport: 60 single-engine, 7 multi-engine, 3 jet, and 1 glider.

Airline and destinations

Top destinations

Busiest domestic routes out of PUW
(September 2022 – August 2023)[34] ! Rank! City! Passengers! Carriers
1Seattle–Tacoma, Washington54,330Alaska
2Boise, Idaho11,540Alaska

Accidents and incidents

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. , effective January 4, 2018.
  2. News: August 29, 2019 . Pullman airport closing temporarily to bring new runway online . WSU Insider . Washington State University . Coug Life . January 13, 2019.
  3. Web site: Viydo . Taylor . October 10, 2019 . Pullman-Moscow Regional Airport completes work on new runway . January 13, 2020 . KREM-TV.
  4. News: New runway at Pullman-Moscow Regional required perseverance & broad cooperation . Airport Improvement . Wysocky . Ken . March 2020 . August 7, 2023.
  5. Web site: Pullman-Moscow Regional Airport realignment program . Mead & Hunt . August 7, 2023.
  6. News: Long . Ben . May 19, 1990 . New airport model of cooperation . 12A . Idahonian .
  7. Web site: October 21, 2016 . List of NPIAS Airports . November 23, 2016 . FAA.gov . Federal Aviation Administration.
  8. News: December 5, 1981 . Horizon Air makes initial flight to Moscow-Pullman Airport . 9C . Lewiston Morning Tribune .
  9. News: February 5, 1983 . Horizon to add region stops . 9 . Spokesman-Review .
  10. News: February 5, 1983 . Horizon plans three flights to Quad Cities . 5B . Lewiston Morning Tribune .
  11. News: March 16, 1983 . Horizon begins operations at Lewiston, Pullman . 3B . Lewiston Morning Tribune .
  12. News: Raquet . Murf . August 20, 1997 . Horizon Air bails on Boise . 1A . Moscow-Pullman Daily News .
  13. News: August 21, 1997 . Horizon Air will be cutting flights . 1C . Lewiston Morning Tribune . Associated Press, staff reports .
  14. News: McClure . Steve . September 2, 1997 . Horizon's defection hits home . 1B . Moscow-Pullman Daily News .
  15. News: Pullman-Moscow Regional Airport moves to full jet service . Lewiston Tribune . Pearce . Emily . November 1, 2022 . August 7, 2023.
  16. News: Cascade's 48-passenger planes will fly from Pullman Tuesday . Lewiston Morning Tribune . January 27, 1982 . 1B.
  17. News: Harrell . Sylvia . April 5, 1973 . Cascade Airways plans flights into Lewiston . 20 . Lewiston Morning Tribune .
  18. News: Airlines report passenger increase at region's airports . Lewiston Morning Tribune . Harrell . Sylvia . January 29, 1978 . 12A.
  19. News: Airwest moves to end Moscow-Pullman flights . Lewiston Morning Tribune . Associated Press, staff . May 31, 1974 . 20.
  20. News: Pullman reaction mixed to departure of Airwest . Lewiston Morning Tribune . Rasmussen . Linda . June 5, 1974 . 13.
  21. News: Harriman . Peter . September 14, 1990 . United Express says goodbye . 1A . Idahonian .
  22. News: Fisher . David . August 17, 1988 . Pullman annexes airport . 1A . Idahonian .
  23. News: One-horse airport doesn't help Palouse's image, says manager . Lewiston Morning Tribune . Darrow . Laurel . April 22, 1989 . 8A.
  24. News: The end of a 'podunk' image?. Idahonian . McCann . Sheila R.. April 22, 1989 . 7A.
  25. News: Cooperation praised at airport groundbreaking . Idahonian . Semerad . Tony . April 24, 1989 . 1A.
  26. News: Semerad . Tony . February 15, 1990 . Weather foils plans for first day . 1A . Idahonian .
  27. News: May 21, 1990 . Palouse's 'front door' opens . 1A . Idahonian .
  28. News: Chung . Christine . 2024-01-26 . Cupcake A.T.M.s and Fire Pits: What You Love at the Airport . 2024-01-31 . The New York Times . en-US . 0362-4331.
  29. News: Clouser . Tim . May 23, 2024 . Pullman-Moscow Regional Airport opens new $92 million terminal free of debt . . . June 10, 2024.
  30. Web site: News . Emily Pearce Moscow-Pullman Daily . 2024-08-16 . Pullman-Moscow Regional Airport celebrates its vaster space . 2024-08-18 . Moscow-Pullman Daily News . en.
  31. News: Kuipers . Anthony . December 1, 2023 . Pullman airport rolls out new terminal . 2024-04-10 . The Lewiston Tribune . en.
  32. News: Pullman-Moscow Regional Airport breaks ground on new terminal project . WSU Insider . (Washington State University) . Wolcott . R.J. . August 11, 2022 . August 7, 2023.
  33. May 22, 2024 . TSA highlights features of new security checkpoint at Pullman-Moscow Regional Airport . . June 10, 2024.
  34. Web site: RITA BTS Transtats – PUW . November 13, 2023 . December 20, 2022 . www.transtats.bts.gov . en.
  35. News: December 29, 1981 . Spokane pilot killed at crash in Pullman . 5 . Spokane Daily Chronicle .
  36. News: December 29, 1981 . Pilot dies when plane goes down . 1B . Lewiston Morning Tribune . Associated Press .
  37. News: December 30, 1981 . Federal investigator begins inquiry into fatal plane crash . 3B . Lewiston Morning Tribune .
  38. News: Pilot error indicated in fatal Pullman crash . Spokane Chronicle . Wanamaker . Ralph . January 26, 1982 . 5.
  39. News: Pilot who crashed may have been trying to find runway . Lewiston Morning Tribune . Associated Press . January 27, 1982 . 8B.
  40. Web site: Three people dead after plane originating from Moscow/Pullman Regional Airport crashes in Montana . 2024-08-18 . www.msn.com.
  41. Web site: phil.drake@helenair.com . PHIL DRAKE . 2024-08-10 . 3 die in plane crash in Scapegoat Wilderness near Augusta . 2024-08-18 . The Independent Record . en.