Why is this a thread we care about? Has anyone here actually lived or worked in a city with two airports? Does anyone remember how well Mirabel worked out?
No international carrier is going to fly to both airports - YYZ and this one. Can you imagine a connection from Toronto on some secondary domestic flight if Pearson were the international hub and this one a domestic hub? That would be a total pain in the ass no matter how great the connection between the two. Flying from New York City is a total pain in the ass for this reason. Ask anyone who lives or works there. And nothing would destroy Air Canada's business as the second largest international airport in North America than splitting Toronto's commercial traffic into two airports.
This is a dumb idea.
If you are a Hamilton booster - John Munro sounds like a great idea, but it will never fly in any big way. It will remain a great place for Fedex and UPS and maybe some smaller vacation carriers.
Orly...not
Gatwick, Stanstead...not
Haneda, Narita. Tokyo almost pulls this off. There is no need to go from one to the other so Tokyo having two airports is not really bad.
Kennedy, Laguardia, Newark Liberty - a cluster**** - this is part of the basis of Toronto's success. That one can travel from Europe or Asia without the hell of having to get to Laguardia from Kennedy or suffer the inter-terminal hell that is Newark Liberty.
That I can think of - there are no other cities in the world which have split their commercial traffic. And there is a good reason why Toronto should not join that club. Pier G now. (Another thread.)
Pickering - other than for general aviation, is a terrible idea.
How in the age of google did you buy into this misinformation? Name one other large metropolitan area in North American even close to Torontos size with only one jet airport ?
Even Atlanta, with the largest and busiest airport in North America with 5 runways in simultaneous operation ( double Pearson capacity due to night restrictions ) has at least 3 other Jet able airports, and another 3 able to handle exec jets, with in 30 miles ( one hours drive) each playing various roles from Logistics to manufacturing to regionals. While most of us will only ever travel through Atlanta, these airport play important roles.
Remember, Toronto has a Jet ban at the Island except for medivac , Buttonville / Oshawas runways are under 5000( to short for many loaded exec jets) , and everyone else is to far away.
Here is a list of similar cities and their Jet airports ( not including GA only airports)
New York City (6 Jet :. EWR, JFK, LGA, SWF, ISP, HPN)
Los Angeles (5 jet: LAX, ONT, BUR, LGB, SNA)
Chicago (two big ones: ORD, MDW, plus midsized KPDA, KGYY) note the population of the Toronto region will surpass Chicago just as Pickering is expected to be opening. So they will still have double our runway capacity even then.
Philadelphia (PHL, ACY)
Dallas (DFW, DAL)
Miami (MIA, FLL, PBI, MPB)
Washington, D.C. (DCA, IAD)
Houston (IAH, HOU, EFD)
The list goes on and on and on... there are plenty of aviation apps and online sites that can help you with this. Any airport with a 6000-7000 ft runway 100-150 ft wide
The real question is “will Toronto still be Open for Business In 2028?”.
For Ontario to be open for business it must provide the requisite infrastructure to support economic development. All forms of transportation are essential and especially efficient airport solutions. Business runs on logistics. And logistics depend on airports to move people and freight. All movement today must be cost effective and fast. With the current airport nearing capacity in 10 years, it cannot service the logistics industry equally as well as moving people. The Pickering Airport can augment YYZ. It can back-fill in the logistic gaps but most importantly it will be moving people who need accessible aviation infrastructure.
It will accommodate the ‘other’ air traffic for corporate, charter, police, military, medical, and more that YYZ cannot accommodate in the future. The geolocation diversity accelerates logistics by overcoming road traffic congestion. In order to truly be open for business Ontario must have the requisite infrastructure to make business move.
Or we can just give it all up so AirCanada shareholders can retire early to Florida without having to work for thier money. Competition is such a tiring thing.