Norman Y. Mineta San José International Airport is a medium-sized airport in San Jose, California. It is located at the north end of the city, near the intersections of three major freeways, Highway 101, Interstate 880, and Highway 87.
Despite San Jose's position as the most populous city in the San Francisco Bay Area, SJC is the smallest of the three Bay Area airports offering scheduled service, with less than one third the passengers of the region's major international airport San Francisco International Airport (SFO), and slightly fewer passengers than Oakland International Airport (OAK). Like Oakland airport, it attracts suburban residents who find SFO to be inconveniently distant from their homes. It also serves as a "reliever" airport, providing access to the Bay Area market for discount carriers, such as Southwest, that are unwilling to deal with the delays due to weather, especially fog, that plague SFO.
SJC has public Wi-Fi available by two service providers, Wayport and T-Mobile. However, T-Mobile is only available in Terminal A, and more specifically, Gates 9 through 16B. Wayport is the only Wi-Fi service available in Terminal C.
American Airlines opened a hub at San Jose in 1988, using slots it obtained in the buyout of Air California in 1986. Reno Air, a startup based in Reno, Nevada, took over many of American's gates until it was bought out by American in 1998. American never re-established its hub, however it is still the airport's second busiest scheduled airline after Southwest Airlines.
In November 2001, the then "San José International Airport" was renamed after Norman Yoshio Mineta, who is a native of San Jose, former mayor, former congressman representing San Jose, and former United States Secretary of Transportation.
As its name implies, Mineta San José International has several flights per day to other countries. American Airlines has a daily international flight to Tokyo, Japan and Mexicana has one daily flight and a twice weekly flight to Guadalajara, Mexico as well as a flight to Morelia, Mexico four times a week.
After the dot-com bubble burst, the city lost several flights as a result to decrease in demand. Air Canada discontinued its flights to Toronto and Ottawa, Canada and American Airlines stopped its nonstop flights to Taipei, Taiwan and Paris, France. American also dropped its focus city service to Miami, St. Louis, Seattle, Denver, and Phoenix; the airline's flights to Southern California were downgraded to American Eagle regional flights.
Dramatic reduction at SJC continued throughout 2004. Alaska Airlines halted its San Jose - Puerto Vallarta and Cabo San Lucas seasonal routes and American Airlines discontinued its San Jose - San Luis Obispo and San Jose - Boston Logan links. In October, 2006, American Airlines will discontinue the San Jose - Tokyo-Narita route.
In April 2004, the city government, in its plan to revive the local economy, called for a restored international flight to Taipei and new international routes from San Jose to United Kingdom, Hong Kong, China, Vietnam via Taiwan, and India.
On November 16, 2005, a scaled-back airport improvement plan was approved and announced. The new two-phase plan called for a North Concourse, which is expected to be completed in 2007, and a simplified Terminal B, rather than the initially proposed James Nissen Central Terminal, to replace the aging Terminal C. In addition, Terminal A will be expanded for additional check-in counters, security checkpoints, and drop-off/pick-up curbside space.
Airports in California | San Jose, California
Международно летище Сан Хосе | ノーマン・ヨシオ・ミネタ・サンノゼ国際空港 | Norman Y. Mineta San José internasjonale lufthavn | 聖荷西國際機場
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