Cyril E. King Airport (
IATA: STT,
ICAO: TIST,
FAALID: STT) is a public airport located two miles (3 km) west of the central business district of
Charlotte Amalie on the island of
St. Thomas in the
United States Virgin Islands.[1] It is currently the busiest airport in the United States Virgin Islands, and
one of the busiest in the eastern Caribbean, servicing 1,403,000 passengers from July 2015 through June 2016.[2] The airport also serves the island of
St. John and is additionally often used by those travelling to the nearby
British Virgin Islands.
Originally known as Mosquito Bay in 1927, the airstrip was the only facility which served the island of St. Thomas. The facility was named after a nearby grassy swamp, which was renamed to Lindbergh Bay after
Charles Lindbergh used it to land the
Spirit of St. Louis.[3] The first passengers landed in 1928, and the airstrip remained in civilian use until it was purchased by the US government on 1 September, 1935. The airstrip was renamed
Bourne Field, after the first person to fly non-stop from the United States to
Nicaragua.[4][5] The field was composed of two 1,600 feet (490 m) long unpaved runways used to train aviators of the
US Marine Corps.[6] In 1940, the
US Navy ordered a major expansion of the base, which saw the extension and paving of the runways along with construction work to accommodate a
VMS-3 observation squadron.[6][7] Once World War II began, VMS-3 patrolled the surrounding areas for enemy submarines, operating the
J2F-A Duck,
Vought SU-2 Corsair,
OS2N-1 Kingfisher, and
Douglas SBD Dauntless.[8][7] By 1944, enemy submarine activity decreased. This left the base redundant, and was handed over to civilian authorities to operate in 1946.[9][10]
Following the closure of the Marine base, the airport was leased to the
US Department of the Interior for civilian use. However, the Navy reserved the power to reactivate the airport for military purposes. After the transfer, the former hangar was converted into the civilian terminal and named after
President Harry S. Truman.[4] The airport was eventually renamed for former governor
Cyril King in 1984.
On 25 March 1950 the Department of the Interior
leased the land to the Virgin Islands. However, the department canceled the lease on 1 July 1954 citing violations of the agreement. According to the department, the Virgin Islands failed to register and report financial transactions relating to the land. As a result of the cancelation, the property was given to the US Virgin Islands Corporation.[11]
One air carrier that has served St. Thomas for many years is
American Airlines, which began serving St. Thomas in 1970 following its acquisition of and merger with Trans Caribbean Airways.[16] In 1975, American as well as Eastern and Pan Am were serving the airport with Boeing 727-100 jetliners, American and Pan Am with nonstop 727 flights from
New York Kennedy Airport with American also operating direct one stop 727 service from Boston and Providence, RI, and Eastern with nonstop 727 flights from Miami and San Juan as well as direct 727 flights from Chicago
O'Hare Airport, Cleveland and Dallas/Fort Worth.[17]
By 1994, American was operating wide body
Airbus A300-600R jets into St. Thomas with nonstop service from Miami and San Juan with direct one stop A300 flights from Chicago O'Hare Airport, Orlando and Philadelphia and was also flying nonstop
Boeing 757-200 service from New York Kennedy Airport.[18] Other airlines operating jet service into St. Thomas at this same time in 1994 included
Continental Airlines with nonstop Boeing 727-200 service from
New York Newark Airport,
Delta Air Lines with nonstop Boeing 757-200 service from Atlanta and St. Croix as well as direct one stop 757 service from
Washington Reagan National Airport,
Private Jet Expeditions (operating as National Airlines at this time) with nonstops from Atlanta and direct one stop service from Chicago
Midway Airport flown with
McDonnell Douglas MD-80s, and
USAir with nonstops from Baltimore and direct one stop service from Pittsburgh flown with Boeing 727-200s.[19]
Also historically the airport hosted
Air Force One and Two, respectively, carrying Bill Clinton, Al Gore, and Joe Biden using Boeing 707s and later Boeing 757s.
Cyril E. King Airport also hosted a number of charter jet airliners including the
Boeing 757,
Boeing 767 and the
McDonnell Douglas DC-10. A new passenger terminal opened in November 1990.
Facilities and aircraft
Cyril E. King Airport covers an area of 280 acres (110 ha) which contains one
asphalt paved
runway (10/28) measuring 7,000 ft × 150 ft (2,134 m × 46 m). For the 12-month period ending September 30, 2017, the airport had 61,255 aircraft operations, an average of 167 per day: 58%
air taxi, 14% scheduled commercial, 27%
general aviation and 1% military. During the same period, there were 98 aircraft based at this airport: 59% multi-engine, 35% single engine, 3% helicopters, 2% jet engine and 1% ultralight.[1] There is also one flight school at the airport, Ace Flight Center. Execujet Flight Services and St. Thomas Jet Center, on the north side of the runway, handle private aviation. Due to the field being located next to high terrain, runway 28 has a large displaced threshold, taking up roughly 1/3 of the runway.
Terminal
The two-story terminal has 11 gates in two departure areas. The main section serves flights bound for the United States and Puerto Rico. It contains a restaurant and bar, gift shop, and
duty-free store. Three smaller departure lounges serve international and St. Croix departures.
Arriving passengers from the United States and Puerto Rico over the age of 18 are greeted with complimentary samples of
Cruzan Rum.
Cyril E. King Airport Terminal Modernization and Expansion Project
There are plans to expand the Cyril E. King Airport terminal to include a second departure lounge on the second floor as well as install
jet bridges and move airport offices to the third floor.[20][21] A $230 million modernization plan for the airport was unveiled by Governor
Kenneth Mapp in June 2018.[22][23]
The airport upgrades will include a pedestrian bridge as well as a ferry terminal to improve transportation.[24][25][26][27]
On September 3, 2019 the VIPA board approved a $175 million budget for FY 2020.[28][29]
Delegate Plaskett announced three transportation grants for V.I. Airports to redesign the apron and improve lighting on the Cyril E. King airport runway, as well as to improve the runway at Henry E. Rohlsen Airport.[30][31]
On November 22, 2019, the Transportation Department awarded a $2 million grant for the Cyril E. King Airport's modernization.[32][33] VIPA said that phase one of construction would begin in April. Each of the four phases may take from 18 to 24 months to complete,[34] for a total of 6–8 years and a cost of $250 million.
On Wednesday, May 26, 2021, the Cyril E. King Airport began the groundbreaking for phase 1.[35][36][37][38]
The Virgin Islands Port Authority(V.I.P.A.) announced $12.2 million for rehabilitating 7,000 .feet of the existing Taxiway A to maintain the structural integrity of the pavement and to minimize foreign object debris at the Cyril E. King Airport (STT,
Charlotte Amalie, Virgin Islands)[39] as well as $7 million under the Airport Improvement Program accounts for the Cyril E. King Airport Commuter Wing project.[40]
At Cyril E. King Airport in Charlotte Amalie, Virgin Islands, more than $12 million is earmarked for rehabilitation of 7,000 ft. of the existing Taxiway A to maintain the structural integrity of the pavement and to minimize foreign object debris. The project has a total of five phases. Phase 2 funds the west 3,300 ft. of the 7,000-ft. taxiway. Future phases will fund the design and construction of the remainder of the taxiway.[41]
On February 8, 2020, Dolphin Water Taxi opened new facilities at the Cyril E. King Airport baggage claim east of the Tropic Tours window as well as the Red Hook Urman Victor Fredericks Marine Terminal.[46][47]
The Last Mile Water Taxi
In May 2023, a new provider of Water Taxi services to St John and The British Virgin Islands was launched, utilizing a former Dohm's Water Taxi wave piercing catamaran and offering pickup service right from baggage claim. [48]
Top destinations
Busiest domestic routes from STT (September 2022 – August 2023)[49]
On December 28, 1970,
Trans Caribbean Airways Flight 505 operated with a
Boeing 727-200 jetliner made a hard landing and ran off the side of the runway. Two of the 48 passengers died in the subsequent fire, and the aircraft was then destroyed by the ensuing conflagration.[51]
On April 27, 1976,
American Airlines Flight 625[52][53] operated with a
Boeing 727-100 jetliner ran off the end of the runway, killing 37 of the 88 on board. The old St. Thomas runway was 4,658 feet long at the time. Following the crash,
American Airlines (AA) suspended jet service to the airport and began operating
Convair 440propliners instead for service to nearby St. Croix (STX) for connections to American mainline jet flights until a new, longer 7,000 foot runway was constructed. These CV-440[54] flights were operated by a division of AA, American Inter-Island, as an interim service until American elected to resume mainline jet aircraft operations into St. Thomas with the advent of the longer runway. The American Inter-Island Convair 440 aircraft were owned by American Airlines and flown and maintained by Antilles Air Boats, a seaplane operator in the Virgin Islands.[55][56][57]
On July 19, 2006,
Douglas DC-3C N782T of Tol-Air Services ditched into the sea off Charlotte Amalie after an engine failure shortly after take-off from Cyril E. King Airport.[66] All four people on board escaped as the aircraft floated for about ten minutes before sinking.[67] The aircraft now lies in 100 feet (30 m) of water and is a dive site.[68]
A Kestrel
Convair C-131F, registration N8277Q performing a freight flight from St. Thomas (US Virgin Islands) to unknown destination with 2 crew, departed St. Thomas' runway 28 and was in the initial climb around 07:47L (11:47Z) when the tower observed smoke from the left-hand engine (P&W R-2800). The crew declared emergency reporting an engine fire and loss of hydraulics and initiated a return to St. Thomas' runway 10, where the aircraft touched down but could not slow. The airplane veered right off the runway, broke through the airport fence and came to a stop on the airport access road. No injuries occurred, the airplane received substantial damage. The airport was closed for several hours. The FAA reported the aircraft went off the runway and received substantial damage.[69]
On October 13, 2012, a
Piper Aztec, N5553Y, departing nearby St. Croix carrying three passengers, crashed approximately eight miles south of Cyril E. King Airport. There was one survivor. After a year-long investigation, it was determined that the pilot suffered
spatial disorientation, descended before he needed to and then crashed into the water.
On June 17, 2015, an
American AirlinesBoeing 757 preparing to fly to John F. Kennedy International Airport was grounded due to a mechanical failure. After returning to the gate, an airport service vehicle collided with the aircraft, severely damaging one of the aircraft's jet engines. No injuries occurred.
On September 6, 2017,
Hurricane Irma caused severe damage to the terminal especially around gate 6. No injuries were reported.