The original Rochester airport was founded in 1928 by the
Mayo Foundation to bring patients to
Mayo Clinic. It was in what is now southeast
Rochester and occupied . The following year "Rochester Airport" was dedicated, and the Rochester Airport Company was founded as a subsidiary of the Mayo Foundation.
Northwest Airlines began running
Ford Trimotors to Rochester from
St. Paul. Rochester was one of the first destinations from the
Twin Cities in Northwest Airlines history, behind
Chicago,
Winnipeg,
Green Bay, and
Fargo. In 1940, the runways were paved and more land was acquired, bringing the airport's area to . During World War II, the
Army Air Corps conducted training operations from the airport. In 1945, the Mayo Foundation gave the airport to the city of Rochester, but the Rochester Airport Company continued to operate the field under an agreement with the city. The airport was renamed
Lobb Field in 1952. In 1960, it was decided to replace Lobb Field with a new airport southwest of town because it could not be expanded to allow larger airliners and was too close to the urban area of Rochester. The original Rochester Airport closed in 1961. In 1960, Rochester Municipal Airport opened at its current location south of downtown Rochester; in 1965, runway 13 was 6400 feet and runway 2 was 4000 feet. Northwest and
Braniff moved to the new airport in 1960, but
Ozark's DC-3s stayed at Lobb until 1961;
North Central Airlines arrived in 1968, and Braniff left around the same time. The first jets were Northwest 727s in 1965. American Airlines began service to
O'Hare International Airport in 1988. 1995 saw the addition of a
United States Customs Service post and it became the Rochester International Airport.
Trans World Airlines operated flights to St. Louis in early-2001, but these routes were dropped very soon due to the
merger with
American Airlines. On September 15, 2005, the primary runway was lengthened from 7,533' to 9,034 following a three-month closure for renovations; runway centerline and touchdown zone lighting were added. The change was made to allow large wide body aircraft, which had been weight-restricted upon departure. In 1970, Imperial Airways offered scheduled helicopter service to
Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport. On December 4, 1970, Imperial Airways announced it was canceling its scheduled helicopter flights in Minnesota, including from Minneapolis–St. Paul to Rochester. In 2020, the airport received a $2,479,991
CARES Act award. During the week of May 1, 2023, workers at the airport worked to rename runway 2/20 to 3/21. The renaming was caused by the magnetic north pole moving enough to change the orientation of the runway.
Future In March 2019, plans for construction of an additional gate and
jet bridge were announced. The proposal for the addition came after a large increase in passengers the previous year and congestion. In July 2019, the Rochester Airport Commission began accepting bids for the jet bridge project. The commission also discussed repaving parts of runway 02/20 as well as additional dining and shopping options in the terminal. At the end of July 2019, the airport received $3.3 million in federal grants to improvements, including the jet bridge project and runway reconstruction. In February 2020, the airport was awarded $750,000 by the United States Department of Transportation for attracting new service, with the federal grant's stated purpose being "revenue guarantee and marketing program to attract new service to
Denver on United Airlines." Airport directors noted that the grant does not guarantee the new destination yet and also does not exclude possible other destinations. In August 2022, the airport was awarded another $850,000 in a federal airport grant. This new grant is allowing for potential flights to
Dallas on
American Airlines. ==Airlines and destinations==