Cuomo plans demolition, redevelopment of LaGuardia Airport

First phase of $4B construction will demolish terminal B and create single, integrated structure

From left: Rendering of TWA Flight Center Hotel at JFK Airport (Credit: MCR Development) and LaGuardia Airport
From left: Rendering of TWA Flight Center Hotel at JFK Airport (Credit: MCR Development) and LaGuardia Airport

Governor Andrew Cuomo announced an overhaul of LaGuardia Airport that will transform the airport into one terminal with expanded transportation access and improved amenities for its passengers, according to an announcement from the governor’s office.

The first half of construction is expected to cost $4 billion. LaGuardia Gateway Partners — a new public private partnership chosen by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey — will build the new terminal. The plans still need to be approved by the Port Authority’s board of directors. The first half of the terminal is expected to open in 2019. The second half of the project will likely be developed together with Delta Air Lines.

The proposed single building will replace LaGuardia’s current makeup of fragmented terminals and means the demolition of the building that houses Terminal B. The new terminal will then be connected to Delta’s terminals C and D.

On what turned out to be a big day for New York City’s airports, Cuomo also announced more details for MCR Development’s proposed TWA Flight Center Hotel at JFK Airport.

“The TWA Flight Center Hotel will celebrate and preserve Eero Saarinen’s masterpiece, returning the landmark to its original glory and reopening it to the public,” said Tyler Morse, MCR’s chief executive officer. The hotel will include 505 rooms as well as 40,000 square feet of meeting space. — Claire Moses

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