Tampa International Airport People Movers

Last updated
Tampa International Airport People Movers
TPA 2018 - SkyConnect (left) and Airside A (right) People Movers.jpg
SkyConnect (left) and Airside A (right) people movers
Overview
Locale Tampa International Airport
Stations11
Service
Type Automated guideway transit
Services5
Rolling stock
History
Opened1971 (airside systems)
1991 (monorail)
2018 (SkyConnect)
Closed2020 (monorail) [2]
Route map

Contents

Airside D
(Gates D46–D61)
BSicon exFLUGr.svg
BSicon exlACC.svg
BSicon uexhKBHF2.svg
BSicon uexhSTRc3.svg
BSicon uhSTRc2.svg
BSicon lACC.svg
BSicon uhKBHF3.svg
BSicon FLUG.svg
Airside C
(Gates C30–C45)
BSicon uexhSTRc1.svg
BSicon uexhSTR2+4.svg
BSicon uexhSTRc3.svg
BSicon HUBa.svg
BSicon BUILDING.svg
BSicon uhSTRc2.svg
BSicon uhSTR3+1.svg
BSicon uhSTRc4.svg
Tampa Airport Marriott
BSicon uexhSTRc1.svg
BSicon exlACC.svg
BSicon HUBrg-R.svg
BSicon uexhKBHF4.svg
BSicon PARKING.svg
BSicon HUBx-Lq.svg
BSicon lACC.svg
BSicon HUBlg-L.svg
BSicon uhKBHF1.svg
BSicon uhSTRc4.svg
 Yeager elevators 
BSicon HUB-R.svg
BSicon exlvHSTACC.svg
BSicon uexnKSTRa.svg
BSicon HUB-L.svg
 Sikorsky elevators 
Airside E
(Gates E62–E75)
BSicon FLUGr.svg
BSicon uhKACCaq.svg
BSicon uhSTRq.svg
BSicon HUB-R.svg
BSicon uhKACCeq.svg
BSicon uexnSTR.svg
BSicon HUBlf-L.svg
BSicon uexhKACCaq.svg
BSicon HUBlg-L.svg
BSicon uexhSTRq.svg
BSicon uexhKACCeq.svg
BSicon exFLUG.svg
Airside B
(Gates B19–B29)
BSicon HUB-R.svg
BSicon uexnSPLa.svg
BSicon HUBrg-L.svg
BSicon HUBrf-L.svg
BSicon uhKACCa.svg
SkyConnect
 Armstrong elevators 
BSicon HUB-R.svg
BSicon exldHSTACC.svg
BSicon uexndSTR.svg
BSicon exldHSTACC.svg
BSicon uexndSTR.svg
BSicon HUB-L.svg
BSicon uhSTR.svg
 Earhart elevators 
BSicon uhSTRc2.svg
BSicon lACC.svg
BSicon HUBlf-R.svg
BSicon uhKBHF3.svg
BSicon HUBx-Rq.svg
BSicon uexndSTR.svg
BSicon uexndSTR.svg
BSicon lACC.svg
BSicon HUBrf-L.svg
BSicon uhKBHF2.svg
BSicon lhSTR(r).svg
BSicon uhSTR+hc3.svg
BSicon uhSTRc2.svg
BSicon uhSTR3+1.svg
BSicon uhSTRc4.svg
BSicon lvNULfg.svg
BSicon HUB.svg
BSicon uexndSTR.svg
BSicon uexndSTR.svg
BSicon uhSTRc1.svg
BSicon uhKRZ2+4ho.svg
BSicon uhSTRc3.svg
Airside F
(Gates F77–F90)
BSicon FLUGr.svg
BSicon lACC.svg
BSicon uhKBHF1.svg
BSicon uhSTRc4.svg
BSicon HUBrg-R.svg
BSicon uexnSTR+l.svg
BSicon HUBx-Lq.svg
BSicon uexndSTRr.svg
BSicon uexndSTRl.svg
BSicon HUBlg-L.svg
BSicon uexnSTR+r.svg
BSicon lhSTR(l).svg
BSicon uhSTR+hc1.svg
BSicon lACC.svg
BSicon uhKBHF4.svg
BSicon FLUG.svg
Airside A
(Gates A1–A18)
BSicon uexnSTR+l.svg
BSicon HUB-R.svg
BSicon uexnSTR.svg
BSicon uexlDST.svg
BSicon uexnSTRq.svg
BSicon uexnSTR+r.svg
BSicon HUB-L.svg
BSicon uexnSTR.svg
BSicon uhSTRe.svg
 Wright Bros. elevators 
BSicon exlHSTACC.svg
BSicon HUB-R.svg
BSicon uexnSTR.svg
Centro other car parking large.svg
BSicon exlHSTACC.svg
BSicon HUB-L.svg
BSicon uexnSTR.svg
BSicon lBRUCKEq-2.svg
BSicon uSTR.svg
 Lindbergh elevators 
 Jannus elevators 
BSicon exlHSTACC.svg
BSicon HUB-R.svg
BSicon uexnSTR.svg
BSicon exlHSTACC.svg
BSicon HUB-L.svg
BSicon uexnSTR.svg
BSicon uhSTRa.svg
 Goddard elevators 
BSicon HUBlf-R.svg
BSicon uexnSTRl.svg
BSicon lNULfq.svg
BSicon HUB-Rq.svg
BSicon uexnSTRq.svg
BSicon HUBrf-L.svg
BSicon uexnSTRr.svg
BSicon uhACC.svg
Economy parking
BSicon uhABZgl+l.svg
BSicon uhKDSTeq.svg
Maintenance facility
BSicon BUS.svg
BSicon uhKACCe.svg
Rental car center

Main terminal/
short-term parking
BSicon PARKING.svg
BSicon uhACCq.svg
AGT lines
Long-term parking
Centro other car parking large.svg
BSicon exlHSTACC.svg
BSicon uexnSTRq.svg
Monorail line

The Tampa International Airport People Movers are a set of automated people mover systems operating within Tampa International Airport. The primary set of people movers are automated guideway transit (AGT) systems that connect the airport's main terminal to four satellite airside concourses. Opened in 1971, the landside/airside shuttles were the first people movers used to transport passengers within an airport terminal and it is today Bombardier Transportation's longest running people mover system. A fifth people mover line known as SkyConnect, which began operating in 2018, connects the main terminal with the airport's economy parking garage and rental car center. In addition, a monorail once connected the main terminal and the long-term parking garage from 1991 until its closure in 2020.

Landside/Airside shuttles

Current Airside E guideway and vehicles TPA 2018 - Airside E People Movers.jpg
Current Airside E guideway and vehicles

The four currently operating airside automated guideway transit (AGT) people mover systems operate as shuttles connecting the main terminal on Level 3 to airside concourses A, C, E, and F. Each airside has its own line, which consists of two guideways with an emergency walkway between them (which can be used to evacuate a shuttle or be used for people to walk should the shuttles fail). On each line, the two guideways each carry a two-car train (one red train and one blue train) consisting of Bombardier Innovia APM 100 vehicles. The shuttles simply run back and forth between the main terminal and the airsides buildings. Passengers board on an island platform between the two guideways and disembark on side platforms at both ends. All main terminal platforms contain platform screen doors, while the airside platforms contain steel doors. The vehicles are serviced at the airside stations where maintenance bays exist beneath the guideways. [3]

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor delivers pre-recorded greetings to travelers on the shuttles as they run between the stations. [4] Tampa's previous mayor Bob Buckhorn also provided these greetings during his tenure as Mayor of Tampa. [5]

History

Original first-generation C-100 vehicles that operated from 1971 to 1996 Original TPA people movers.jpg
Original first-generation C-100 vehicles that operated from 1971 to 1996

When the terminal opened in 1971, the landside/airside shuttles were the first automated people mover systems to operate in an airport. The shuttles were originally built by Westinghouse Electric Corporation (who was also contracted to install the terminal's original elevators and escalators). Upon opening, the airport included lines to Airsides B, C, D, and E using eight first-generation Westinghouse C-100 vehicles (one vehicle on each guideway). [6] [7] Local WFLA radio personality Jack Harris provided the original voice for the audio announcements for the shuttles (and other announcements throughout the airport). [8]

Terminal station for Airside E shuttle in 1975 Airside E People mover.jpg
Terminal station for Airside E shuttle in 1975

Tampa International Airport's landside/airside design was the first of its type in the world, and the use of people movers to shuttle people between the landside terminal and airside concourses was a key part of keeping walking distances short. The airport's layout was so well received that it was largely replicated at Orlando International Airport (complete with its own landside/airside shuttles built by Westinghouse) in 1981. [9]

Airside F was added to the airport in 1987 along with an additional shuttle line. Airside F's shuttles included new second-generation C-100 vehicles, and it would be the first airside system to include two-car trains. [10] Airside F's shuttle station was built on the second level of the airside building (the same level as the passenger boarding jetways) unlike the original airsides, which had their shuttle stations on the third level (the same as the landside terminal). This was due to the improved technology of the second-generation C-100 vehicles, which could better handle inclines than the original vehicles and it eliminated the need for passengers to descend a level to access aircraft. [9] Every subsequent airside would have its shuttle station on the second level.

Defunct Airside B guideway TPA 2018 - Former Airside B People Mover Guideway.jpg
Defunct Airside B guideway

Airside B closed permanently in 1991. In lieu of reopening Airside B, Airside A was built in 1995. Airside A's shuttle system has operated with CX-100 vehicles (known today as the Bombardier Innovia APM 100) since its opening and it operates with two-car trains. After its closure, Airside B's shuttles remained dormant on the guideway until the airside was demolished in 2003. [11] Despite the demolition, part of the shuttle guideway to the former Airside B still remains abandoned at the airport today. [10]

Terminal entrance to Airside A system after the 2018 renovation to the main terminal TPA 2018 - Airside A Entrance.jpg
Terminal entrance to Airside A system after the 2018 renovation to the main terminal

In 1996, the original Airside C and Airside D were renovated. As part of the renovation, the original vehicles on their people movers were replaced with CX-100 vehicles along with other upgrades to the systems. Upon completion of the renovations, the original Airside E closed which led to the retirement of the last of the airport's original C-100 vehicles. [10]

Airside E was rebuilt in 2002, and its new shuttles included CX-100 vehicles running in two-car trains. Airside C was then demolished and rebuilt. During the rebuild, the airport saved $4 million by reusing 420 feet of the original Airside C's shuttle guideway and the CX-100 vehicles, which were installed in 1996. The vehicles were refurbished and resumed service when the rebuilt Airside C opened in April 2005. [12]

One month after Airside C reopened, Airside D closed permanently. Airside D's CX-100 vehicles, which were also installed in 1996, were refurbished and were relocated to Airside C, where they were used to expand the existing shuttles to two-car trains. Airside D was demolished in 2007, though much of the shuttle infrastructure was left in place until 2019. [12]

Airside F's second-generation C-100 vehicles were replaced with CX-100 vehicles by Bombardier (who has since acquired the remains of Westinghouse's transportation department) in 2008. [12]

In 2018, work was complete to remodel the main terminal. As part of the renovation, the shuttle stations were rebuilt and moved outward to give the center of the building more space on Level 3. The Airside D shuttle station, which had been simply roped off since its closure, was also removed at the same time and was replaced with a food court. [13] The rest of the Airside D guideway was demolished in 2019. [14]

Future

Tampa International Airport is preparing to built a replacement Airside D, which includes a new Airside D shuttle system. Construction is underway on a new shuttle station in the main terminal and the new Airside is set to be complete in 2028. [15]

The airport is also in the process of replacing the shuttle vehicles on Airsides A and C (which have been in service since the mid 1990s). Alstom, which acquired Bombardier's transportation division in 2021, will supply the new Innovia APM 300R trains which will debut in 2025. The project will also rehabilitate the guideways as well. The Innovia APM 300R vehicles will also be used on the new Airside D shuttle system. The airport also plans to replace Airside E and Airside F's shuttles with new Innovia APM 300R by the end of the decade. [16]

SkyConnect

SkyConnect vehicles TPA 2018 - SkyConnect Vehicles.jpg
SkyConnect vehicles
SkyConnect main terminal station TPA 2018 - SkyConnect Station Main Terminal Interior.jpg
SkyConnect main terminal station

An additional people mover line named SkyConnect connects the main terminal with the rental car center and the economy parking garage. SkyConnect has three stations: one on Level 4 of the main terminal (right above the former station for the shuttle line to Airside B), the economy parking garage, and the rental car center (which includes access to low-cost rentals and a remote curbside). The guideway primarily runs along the airport's entrance road, George J. Bean Parkway, and passes underneath Taxiway J to connect with rental car and parking facilities. SkyConnect opened in 2018 and was built in conjunction with those facilities. [17]

Unlike the landside/airside shuttles, SkyConnect uses Mitsubishi Crystal Mover vehicles. The trains run between the three stations in a pinched-loop configuration. [18]

Long-Term Parking Monorail (defunct)

Monorail vehicles TPA 2018 - Monorail Vehicles.jpg
Monorail vehicles
Monorail Amelia Earhart elevators station TPA 2018 - Monorail Station Earhart Elevators.jpg
Monorail Amelia Earhart elevators station

An automated monorail system also once connected the main terminal on Level 5 to the long-term parking garage, [19] stopping at each elevator bank in both buildings. It was installed in 1991 when the long-term parking garage was built. [10] It used six Bombardier UM III vehicles, which are also used on the Jacksonville Skyway. [1]

The monorail was located on level 7 of the long-term parking garage, where it ran in a loop between the four elevator banks with stations at each bank. Once it completed the loop, it crossed a bridge onto level 5 of the short-term parking garage. In the short-term garage, it ran in a straight path between the four elevator banks, which passengers could use to access the terminal. The monorail made three stops in the short-term garage providing access to the four elevator banks before returning to the long-term garage and repeating the loop. Bombardier Transportation maintained the system by contract and it was monitored from the airport's communications center. The monorail ran 24 hours a day except for a once-a-week maintenance shut-down in the overnight hours. Thales Rail Signalling Solutions won a contract in 2008 to completely upgrade the computer control system. [20]

Following the monorail's closure in early 2020, the airport opted not to invest in a replacement system due to high costs. Instead, a series of moving walkways are being constructed on Level 4 of the long term garage to allow passengers to access the main terminal more quickly via the outdoor connecting bridges. [21]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">People mover</span> Fully automated transit systems, generally serving relatively small areas

A people mover or automated people mover (APM) is a type of small scale automated guideway transit system. The term is generally used only to describe systems serving relatively small areas such as airports, downtown districts or theme parks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tampa International Airport</span> Primary airport serving the Tampa Bay area, Florida, United States

Tampa International Airport is an international airport six miles (9.7 km) west of Downtown Tampa, in Hillsborough County, Florida, United States. The airport is publicly owned by Hillsborough County Aviation Authority (HCAA). The airport serves 100 non-stop destinations throughout North America, Central America, the Caribbean and Europe across multiple carriers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Automated guideway transit</span> Fully automated transit system

An automated guideway transit (AGT) or automated fixed-guideway transit or automatic guideway transit system is a type of fixed guideway transit infrastructure with a riding or suspension track that supports and physically guides one or more driverless vehicles along its length. The vehicles are often rubber tired or steel wheeled, but other traction systems including air cushion, suspended monorail and maglev have been implemented. The guideway provides both physical support, like a road, as well as the guidance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AirTrain (San Francisco International Airport)</span> People mover at San Francisco International Airport

AirTrain is a fully automated people mover at San Francisco International Airport (SFO) that opened on February 24, 2003. It operates 24 hours a day on two separate lines, covering a total of three miles (4.8 km). The service charges no fares; it is funded by a fee charged to rental car customers. The system is located outside of the sterile area of each terminal, meaning passengers must exit and re-enter through a security checkpoint when using AirTrain to travel between terminals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Innovia APM 100</span> Automated people mover manufactured by Bombardier

The Innovia APM 100 is an automated people mover (APM) rolling stock first developed by Westinghouse, intended mainly for airport connections and light rail in towns. They are operated by Automatic Train Control (ATC), making it fully automatic and driverless.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Crystal Mover</span> Rubber-tired automated people mover system manufactured by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries

The Crystal Mover is a rubber-tired automated people mover (APM) system for airport and urban rail transit applications manufactured at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) Mihara Machinery Works in Mihara, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. The Crystal Mover, initially based on the Japanese APM standard, is used in automated guideway transit (AGT) systems in China, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, the United Arab Emirates and the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Changi Airport Skytrain</span> Automated people mover system in Singapore Changi Airport

The Changi Airport Skytrain is an automated people mover (APM) that connects Terminals 1, 2 and 3 at Singapore Changi Airport. Opened in 1990, it was the first driverless and automated system of its kind in South East Asia. The Changi Airport Skytrain operates from 05:00 to 02:30 daily. Traveling on the Skytrain is free and an inter-terminal journey takes approximately four minutes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">DFW Skylink</span> Automated people mover at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport

Skylink is an automated people mover (APM) system operating at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFW). It is an application of the Innovia APM 200 system and is maintained and operated by Alstom. When it opened in 2005, it was the world's longest airside airport train system.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Airport Transit System</span> People mover system at OHare International Airport

The Airport Transit System (ATS) is an automated people mover system at Chicago O'Hare International Airport. It opened on May 6, 1993. The ATS moves passengers between the airport terminals and parking facilities, and was designed to operate 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The system was closed for refurbishment and modernization between January 2019 and November 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Skyway (George Bush Intercontinental Airport)</span> People mover system in Houston, Texas

Skyway is an automated people mover system operating at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas. The system is 0.7 miles (1.1 km) long, and runs along the north side of the airport, beyond airport security. The system serves all of the airport's five terminals, with four stations at Terminal A, Terminal B, Terminal C, and International Terminal D/E, respectively. Skyway, which operates airside, is one of two people movers currently operating at Bush Intercontinental Airport. The other people mover, which operates landside, opened in 1969 and is known as the Subway.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Plane Train</span> Airside people mover at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport

The Plane Train is a 24/7 automated people mover (APM) located at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport. Made by Westinghouse Electric Corporation and maintained by Bombardier, it transports passengers between the terminals and the airside concourses. The system is the world's most heavily traveled airport APM, with 64 million riders as of 2002.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pittsburgh International Airport People Movers</span>

The Pittsburgh International Airport People Mover is a fully automated people mover system at the Pittsburgh International Airport serving Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Harry Reid International Airport Automated People Movers</span> Three transport rail systems in Las Vegas, Nevada

The Harry Reid International Airport People Movers are three separate automatic people mover systems operating at Harry Reid International Airport near Las Vegas, Nevada. The people mover system consists of three separate lines: the Green Line connecting the Main Terminal to the C Gate Concourse, the Blue Line connecting the Main Terminal to the D Gate Concourse, and the Red Line connecting the D Gates Concourse to Terminal 3. Each line currently uses CITYFLO650 radio-based moving block signaling technology, which was introduced to the tram system when the Green and Blue Lines when the vehicles were replaced, the Red Line has always used moving block signaling technology as it opened in 2012 and it is the newest of the three lines.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Innovia APM 200</span>

The Innovia APM 200 is an automated people mover system (APM) manufactured and marketed by Bombardier Transportation. It was second generation of Innovia APM offered and is part of Alstom's Innovia series of fully automated transportation systems.

The SMF Automated People Mover is an elevated automated people mover system at Sacramento International Airport in Sacramento, California. The system opened on October 6, 2011, and is used to move passengers between Central Terminal B (landside) and Concourse B (airside). The system uses two Bombardier Innovia APM 100 vehicles operating as single cars on two separate parallel tracks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Innovia APM</span> Automated people mover system

Innovia APM is a rubber-tired automated people mover system (APM) currently manufactured and marketed by Alstom as part of its Innovia series of fully automated transportation systems. The technology was introduced in 1963 by Westinghouse and has been improved over three generations: the Innovia APM 100, Innovia APM 200, and the latest model, the Innovia APM 300. The license to use the technology has also passed hands several times, from Westinghouse to AEG in 1988, to Adtranz in 1996, to Bombardier Transportation in 2001, and most recently to Alstom in 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Orlando International Airport People Movers</span> Automated transit system

The Orlando International Airport People Movers are a set of automated people mover (APM) systems operating within Orlando International Airport. The four original people mover systems connect the airport's main terminal to four satellite airside concourses. A fifth AGT people mover system was installed in 2017 to connect the main terminal with the airport's new Intermodal Terminal.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gatwick Airport Shuttle Transit</span> Automated people mover linking terminals at Gatwick Airport

The Gatwick Airport Shuttle Transit is a 0.75-mile (1.21 km) long elevated automated people mover that links the North and South Terminals at London's Gatwick Airport. The line is ground-side, and besides linking the two terminals also serves to link the North terminal to the airport railway station. Although sometimes colloquially, but erroneously, known as a "monorail", the transit vehicles are carried on rubber tyres running on a concrete track with twin running surfaces and are steered by separate guide rails.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heathrow Terminal 5 Transit</span> Automated people mover at London Heathrow Airport

The Heathrow Terminal 5 Transit is an automated people mover system (APM) at London Heathrow Airport in the United Kingdom. It operates in the Heathrow Terminal 5 complex and conveys air passengers between the main airport terminal and its satellite buildings.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LAX Automated People Mover</span> Future automated people mover system serving Los Angeles International Airport

The LAX Automated People Mover is an under construction automated people mover (APM) system that will serve the area around Los Angeles International Airport (LAX). The system will be owned by Los Angeles World Airports (LAWA) and operated by LAX Integrated Express Solutions (LINXS). The line will run for 2.25 miles (3.62 km) and have six stations that connect the LAX Consolidated Rent-A-Car Facility (ConRAC), the Los Angeles Metro Rail system, and the LAX West Intermodal Transportation Facility with the airport's central terminal area (CTA). The line was initially planned to open in 2023, but is now planned to open on October 30, 2025.

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