Developer: Greater Toronto Airports Authority
  
Address: 6090 Viscount Rd, Mississauga
Category: Institutional, Transit
Status: Pre-ConstructionCompletion: TBD
Height: ? ft / ? mStoreys: ? storeys
Project Forum 830 posts
Real Estate Forum
Follow 8 followingUpload 18 photos
Official WebsiteReport Error


Mississauga Pearson Transit Hub | ?m | ?s | GTAA

Nice little website I came across about the Pearson Transit Hub.
 
I suspect it will be yyz
From wiki:
This ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_IATA-indexed_railway_stations ) is a list of IATA-indexed railway stations, which are assigned codes by the IATA, similar to IATA airport codes. Such railway stations are typically used in air-rail alliances or code sharing agreements (commonly known as "Rail Fly") between airlines and rail lines, particularly in Europe. By assigning railway stations an IATA code, passengers on trips involving those stations can be ticketed all the way. Sometimes they can get checked straight through to their final destination, without the bother of having to claim their baggage and check-in again when changing between the rail and air portions of a trip. At other places passengers have to carry their baggage on the train, but anyway need no separate train booking process.

See also: https://www.cntraveler.com/story/how-airports-get-their-codes
 
From wiki:
This ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_IATA-indexed_railway_stations ) is a list of IATA-indexed railway stations, which are assigned codes by the IATA, similar to IATA airport codes. Such railway stations are typically used in air-rail alliances or code sharing agreements (commonly known as "Rail Fly") between airlines and rail lines, particularly in Europe. By assigning railway stations an IATA code, passengers on trips involving those stations can be ticketed all the way. Sometimes they can get checked straight through to their final destination, without the bother of having to claim their baggage and check-in again when changing between the rail and air portions of a trip. At other places passengers have to carry their baggage on the train, but anyway need no separate train booking process.

See also: https://www.cntraveler.com/story/how-airports-get-their-codes

So if we designate Toronto Union Station as YYZ, passengers can continue from Pearson to downtown Toronto on the same airline fare. And vice-versa. Did I get that right?
 
Never understood why, basically uniquely in the world, Canadian cities all have these silly ‘YXX’ airport codes. No other country seems to have this constraint. How much would GTAA have to pay the owner of TOR — Torrington Municipal Airport, Wyoming — to get their hands on it and join the ranks of SYD, MEL, BOS, and the many other cities with logical/legible IATA codes?
 
Never understood why, basically uniquely in the world, Canadian cities all have these silly ‘YXX’ airport codes. No other country seems to have this constraint. How much would GTAA have to pay the owner of TOR — Torrington Municipal Airport, Wyoming — to get their hands on it and join the ranks of SYD, MEL, BOS, and the many other cities with logical/legible IATA codes?

Certainly not unique to Canada.

 
Never understood why, basically uniquely in the world, Canadian cities all have these silly ‘YXX’ airport codes. No other country seems to have this constraint. How much would GTAA have to pay the owner of TOR — Torrington Municipal Airport, Wyoming — to get their hands on it and join the ranks of SYD, MEL, BOS, and the many other cities with logical/legible IATA codes?

Because pearson has decided to keep its iata (yyz) and its icao (cyyz) codes as similar as possible. Unlike Tokyo Haneda (HND vs RJTT) or Bejing Capital (PEK vs ZBAA).

Note that the "C" in the icao codes is a country specific code identifying all airports in Canada.

See here for icao vs iata airport code information:
 
Never understood why, basically uniquely in the world, Canadian cities all have these silly ‘YXX’ airport codes. No other country seems to have this constraint. How much would GTAA have to pay the owner of TOR — Torrington Municipal Airport, Wyoming — to get their hands on it and join the ranks of SYD, MEL, BOS, and the many other cities with logical/legible IATA codes?
Because IATA is in Canada, and gave Canadian airport codes special treatment.
 

Back
Top