Mills Field The
City and
County of
San Francisco first leased, from the
Darius Ogden Mills estate, at the present airport site on March 15, 1927, for what was then to be a temporary and experimental airport project. San Francisco held a dedication ceremony at the airfield, officially named the Mills Field Municipal Airport of San Francisco, on May 7, 1927, on the 150-acre cow pasture. The land was leased from the Mills Estate in an agreement made with
Ogden L. Mills who oversaw the large tracts of property originally acquired by his grandfather, the banker
Darius O. Mills. San Francisco purchased the property and the surrounding area expanding the site to beginning in August 1930. Competition with United led Pacific Seaboard to move all of its operations to the eastern U.S., and rename itself
Chicago and Southern Air Lines (C&S). It became a large domestic and international air carrier. Chicago & Southern was acquired by and merged into
Delta Air Lines in 1953, giving Delta its first international routes. Delta used the route authority inherited from C&S to fly one of its first international services operated with
Convair 880 jet aircraft from San Francisco to
Montego Bay,
Jamaica, and
Caracas,
Venezuela, via intermediate stops in
Dallas and
New Orleans in 1962.
World War II During World War II, the airport was used as a
Coast Guard base and Army Air Corps training and staging base. The base was called
Naval Auxiliary Air Facility Mills Field and
Coast Guard Air Station, San Francisco.
Pan American World Airways (Pan Am), which had operated international flying boat service from
Treasure Island, had to move its Pacific and Alaska seaplane operations to SFO in 1944 after Treasure Island was expropriated for use as a military base. Pan Am began service from SFO after World War II with five weekly flights to
Honolulu, one of which continued to
Canton Island,
Fiji,
New Caledonia, and
Auckland.
International operations The first service by foreign carriers was on
Australian National Airways (ANA)
Douglas DC-4s flown by
British Commonwealth Pacific Airlines:
Sydney–Auckland–Fiji–
Kanton Island–Honolulu–San Francisco–
Vancouver, BC. The first flight left Australia on September 15, 1946. In 1947
Pan American World Airways began its "round the world" flights from SFO to
Guam,
Japan, the
Philippines,
China and other countries; Pan Am also flew to Sydney from SFO. The year 1947 saw the start of United Airlines
Douglas DC-6 flights to
Hawaii and
Philippine Airlines flights to
Manila. In 1954
Qantas took over the ANA/BCPA route from SFO to Sydney; starting in 1959 their
Boeing 707s flew to Sydney via Honolulu and
Nadi, Fiji, and in the other direction to New York and London. Pan Am scheduled
Boeing 707-320s from Tokyo nonstop to SFO (winter only at first) starting in 1960–61; the westbound nonstops had to await the longer range Boeing 707-320B.
British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC, a predecessor of
British Airways) arrived in 1957; in 1960 its
Bristol Britannias flew London–New York City–San Francisco–Honolulu–Wake Island–Tokyo–Hong Kong as part of BOAC's around-the-world service. By 1961 BOAC had replaced the Britannias with Boeing 707s that did not require the fuel stop at the
Wake Island Airfield.
Japan Airlines (JAL) arrived at SFO in 1954; in 1961 it was flying
Douglas DC-8s San Francisco–Honolulu–Tokyo. In 1961
Lufthansa had begun serving SFO with Boeing 707s flying San Francisco–Montreal
Dorval Airport–Paris Orly Airport–Frankfurt three days a week. Lufthansa operated
Boeing 720Bs on this routing in 1963 along with Boeing 707s to Frankfurt via Montreal and London Heathrow Airport. Pan Am/Panagra service from SFO to South America was taken over in the late 1960s by
Braniff International, which operated Douglas DC-8-62s to SFO after Braniff's acquisition of Panagra. In 1970
CP Air (formerly
Canadian Pacific Air Lines)
Boeing 737-200s flew nonstop to Vancouver, BC, and on to Winnipeg, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal.
Domestic expansion The first nonstops to the U.S. east coast were United
Douglas DC-7s in 1954. The airport's new Terminal Building opened on August 27, 1954. The large display of aircraft including a
Convair B-36 Peacemaker bomber, was a marvel for its time. The building became the Central Terminal with the addition of the South Terminal and the North Terminal and was heavily rebuilt as the International Terminal in 1984 and then modified again as the current Terminal 2. Domestically, the April 1957
Official Airline Guide (OAG) lists 71 scheduled weekday departures on United (plus ten flights a week to Honolulu), 22 on
Western Airlines, 19 on Southwest Airways (which was later renamed
Pacific Air Lines), 12 on
Trans World Airlines (TWA), seven on
American Airlines and three on
Pacific Southwest Airlines (PSA). As for international flights, Pan American had 21 departures a week,
Japan Airlines (JAL) had five, and
Qantas also had five.
Southwest/Pacific/Air West C-47 landing at SFO in 1948
Southwest Airways began flying scheduled passenger operations from SFO in 1946 with war surplus
C-47s, the military version of the
Douglas DC-3. In the late 1950s, Southwest Airways changed its name to
Pacific Air Lines, which was based at SFO. In 1959, Pacific Air Lines began flying new
Fairchild F-27s from SFO and by 1966 was flying new
Boeing 727-100s from the airport. Pacific used the 727 to introduce the first jet service from San Francisco to several cities in California including
Bakersfield,
Eureka/
Arcata,
Fresno,
Lake Tahoe,
Monterey and
Santa Barbara. In 1968 Pacific merged with
Bonanza Air Lines and
West Coast Airlines to form Air West, which also had its headquarters at SFO. West Coast Airlines had served SFO mainly with
Douglas DC-9-10s and
Fairchild F-27s to Oregon and Washington states. In 1970, Air West was acquired by
Howard Hughes who renamed the airline
Hughes Airwest, which continued to be based at the airport where it also operated a hub. By the late 1970s, the airline was operating an all-jet fleet of
Boeing 727-200, Douglas DC-9-10, and
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 jetliners serving an extensive route network in the western U.S. with flights to Mexico and western Canada as well. Hughes Airwest was eventually acquired by Minneapolis-based
Republic Airlines (1979–1986) in 1980 and the airline's headquarters office at SFO was closed.
Jet age The jet age arrived at SFO in March 1959 when TWA introduced
Boeing 707-131s nonstop to New York
Idlewild Airport (which was renamed
JFK Airport in 1963). United then constructed a large maintenance facility in San Francisco for its new
Douglas DC-8s, which were also flying nonstop to New York. In July 1959, the first
jetway bridge was installed at SFO, one of the first in the United States. On the cover of January 3, 1960, American Airlines timetable contained this message: "
NOW! 707 JET FLAGSHIP SERVICE – NONSTOP SAN FRANCISCO – NEW YORK: 2 FLIGHTS DAILY" Also, in 1960, Western Airlines was operating "champagne flights" with
Boeing 707s and
Lockheed L-188 Electras to Los Angeles, Seattle, San Diego and Portland, Oregon. In 1961 the airport had helicopter service on
San Francisco and Oakland Helicopter Airlines (known as SFO Helicopter Airlines, and as SFO Helicopter) with 68 flights a day. Helicopters flew from SFO to downtown heliports in San Francisco and Oakland, to a new heliport near the
Berkeley Marina and to
Oakland Airport (OAK). In its timetable, SFO Helicopter Airlines, which was based at the airport, described its rotorcraft as "modern, jet turbine powered
Sikorsky S-62 ten passenger amphibious helicopters". By 1962
Delta Air Lines was flying
Convair 880s to SFO on one its first international jet services, San Francisco–
Dallas Love Field–New Orleans–Montego Bay, Jamaica–Caracas, Venezuela. SFO was among the first airports in the United States to install
moving walkways inside a terminal. A set opened on May 20, 1964, in Concourse B and was the world's longest moving walkways at the time.
Service in California By 1960, all
Pacific Southwest Airlines (PSA) flights out of SFO were operated with
Lockheed L-188 Electras nonstop to Los Angeles (
LAX) and Burbank (BUR) with some flights continuing to San Diego. In summer 1962 PSA had 14 departures a day, Monday through Thursday to Southern California, 21 departures on Friday and 22 on Sunday. In 1965 PSA was operating new
Boeing 727-100s which were joined in 1967 by
Boeing 727-200s and
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30s. In 1974, PSA was flying two wide body
Lockheed L-1011 TriStars. Minor damage to the runways was quickly repaired. In 1989, a master plan and
Environmental Impact Report were prepared to guide development over the next two decades. During the boom of the 1990s and the
dot-com boom SFO became the sixth
busiest airport in the world, but since 2001, when the boom ended, SFO has fallen out of the top 20. United Express turboprops were scheduled 60 minutes apart to the shuttle connecting passengers between SFO and nearby
San Jose International Airport during the boom era. United Groundlink supplemented this service with alternate 60-minute frequencies. A $2.4 billion International Terminal Complex opened in December 2000, replacing Terminal 2 (known then as the International Terminal). SFO's long-running museum exhibition program, now called SFO Museum, won unprecedented accreditation by the
American Alliance of Museums in 1999. SFO experiences delays (known as
flow control) in overcast weather when only two of the airport's four runways can be used at a time because the centerlines of the parallel runway sets (01R/01L and 28R/28L) are only apart. Airport planners advanced proposals that would extend the airport's runways by adding up to of fill to
San Francisco Bay and increase their separation by up to in 1998 to accommodate arrivals and departures during periods of low visibility. Other proposals included three floating runways, each approximately long and wide. The airport would be required by law to restore Bay land elsewhere in the Bay Area to offset the fill. One mitigation proposal would have the airport purchase and restore the of South Bay wetlands owned by
Cargill Salt to compensate for the new fill. These expansion proposals met resistance from environmental groups, including the Sierra Club, fearing damage to the habitat of animals near the airport, recreational degradation (such as windsurfing) and bay water quality. State Senator
John L. Burton introduced SB 1562 on February 18, 2000, to bypass the environmental impact study that would normally be required for a large project like the proposed Bay fill and mitigation in order to expedite construction. SB 1562 was signed into law on September 29, 2000. A study commissioned by the airport and released in 2001 stated that alternatives to airport expansion, such as redirecting traffic to other regional airports (Oakland or San Jose), capping the number of flights, or charging higher landing fees at selected times of the day would result in higher fares and poorer service. However, the proposal to build new runways on Bay fill continued to attract opposition from environmental groups and local residents. The airport expansion cost was estimated at in 1998, rising to a year later, including an estimate of for the Cargill wetlands purchase and restoration. The delays during poor weather (among other reasons) caused some airlines, especially
low-cost carriers such as
Southwest Airlines, to shift all of their services from SFO to the
Oakland and
San Jose airports. However, Southwest eventually returned to San Francisco in 2007.
BART to SFO A long-planned extension of the
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) system to the airport opened on June 22, 2003, allowing passengers to board BART trains at the international or domestic terminals and have direct rail transportation to downtown
San Francisco,
Oakland, and the
East Bay. On February 24, 2003, the
AirTrain people mover opened, transporting passengers between terminals, parking lots, the BART station, and the rental car center on small automatic trains.
Recent developments SFO became the base of operations for start-up airline
Virgin America, with service to over 20 destinations. On October 4, 2007, an
Airbus A380 jumbo jet made its first visit to SFO. On July 14, 2008, SFO was voted Best International Airport in North America for 2008 in the World Airports Survey by
Skytrax. The following year on June 9, Skytrax announced SFO as the second-best International Airport in North America in the 2009 World Airports Survey, losing to
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. In response to longstanding
FAA concerns that the airport's air traffic
control tower, located atop Terminal 2, could not withstand a major earthquake, on July 9, 2012, crews broke ground for a new torch-shaped tower. The new tower is located between Terminals 1 and 2, and the base of the tower building contains passages between the two terminals for passengers both pre- and post-security screening, which dictated the narrow tower base. Originally scheduled for completion in the summer of 2016 at a cost of $102 million, the new tower began operations on October 15, 2016. SFO was one of several US airports that operated the
Registered Traveler program from April 2007 until funding ended in June 2009. This program let travelers who had paid for pre-screening pass through security checkpoints quickly. Baggage and passenger screening is operated by
Covenant Aviation Security, a
Transportation Security Administration contractor, nicknamed "Team SFO". SFO was the first airport in the United States to integrate in-line baggage screening into its
baggage handling system and has been a model for other airports since the
September 11 attacks in 2001. In September 2018, SFO announced plans to use sustainable fuels after signing an agreement with fuel suppliers, airlines, and agencies. As part of the agreement,
Shell and
SkyNRG began supplying
sustainable aviation fuel to
KLM,
SAS, and
Finnair flights operating out of SFO. Like most other airports, SFO sustained a
massive decline in traffic in 2020 and 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The only upside was that the decline reduced traffic to levels easily handled in all weather conditions. ==Runways==