San Jose Just Keeps Growing in a Straight Line


I’ve written a lot about American’s former hubs in recent posts of this series, but none of them can say they were dehubbed by American twice. Only San Jose holds that… uh… well, let’s call it an honor. Within a span of 10 years, American took its hub away from the airport on two occasions, and that has certainly made an impact on the airport’s development over the years.

The first real terminal at SJC was built in 1965 at a bend in the airport road. It was made for ground-level boarding, and it wasn’t very large. But in later years it expanded to the northwest with more gate space. This would eventually become what in the end was known as Terminal C.

Unlike American’s Nashville and Raleigh/Durham hubs which were conjured from scratch, the San Jose hub came after buying AirCal in 1986. American liked what it saw in San Jose, and a new terminal A was planned to support this with 16 gates.

Terminal A was not connected to the existing terminal building, but American didn’t really care about that anyway. It just need to be able to connect to itself.

This hub stuck around until 1993 when American walked away. As often happens, another airline saw the vacuum left by American and decided to set up shop. In this case, it was Reno Air that stepped in. Reno Air started in 1992 from its, well, it’s Reno hub. But in 1993 it jumped at the chance to turn San Jose into a hub as well.

I had the chance to see this up close when I flew the airline down to LAX in 1997, but it wouldn’t last for long. American ended up buying Reno Air in 1999, and so once again, American found itself with a San Jose hub.

In 1999, of course, the economic climate was very different. Silicon Valley was in the heat of the .com boom, and American decided not only to keep the reacquired hub but grow it further with nonstops to places like Paris and Taipei. That required building new international arrival facilities just to the southeast of the existing gates in Terminal A, highlighted in red below.

But then, the bubble burst, 9/11 happened, and American walked away from the hub yet again. What an uncomfortably familiar place to be.

San Jose was left with an underutilized Terminal A and an old Terminal C in desperate need of modernization. I say that, but this is the time when I moved up to the area for grad school, and man did I love how easy it was to fly through Terminal C. I have many happy memories on America West going in and out over the years.

But, the airport went to work. The original plan was to build a giant, brand new terminal to replace everything, but that was scaled back to keep and expand the landside of Terminal A to better deal with local traveler demand. It would also create a big, new, Terminal B to replace Terminal C.

The northern part of Terminal C was shut down to make room for the Terminal B build. Terminal B was opened in 2010, and that’s when Terminal C was shut down for good. With Terminal C demolished, demand slowly increased to the point where the airport built eight extra gates at the southeastern end in an interim terminal extension between 2017 and 2019.

That’s where the airport is today, having 36 gates in total. All airlines are in Terminal A except for the airport’s largest tenant Southwest, Alaska/Hawaiian, and Zipair in Terminal B. So, what comes next?

San Jose has a plan to basically create a mirror image of the existing Terminal B and paste it further to the southeast. The eight gates in the interim terminal will be demolished and replaced. There will then be an additional six gates built for a total of 42 at the airport.

That’s what the Environmental Assessment proposes, and it has been shown to have no impact. I don’t think timing has been set for this project, nor has funding been completed. But it will be necessary eventually. And since this is a largely local market where connections are minimal, it must not be overly concerning to SJC that they just keep building in a straight line along the runways.

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Brett Avatar

29 responses to “San Jose Just Keeps Growing in a Straight Line”

  1. Bevvy Avatar
    Bevvy

    CF,
    It looks from the picture that the terminal cannot be expanded after this current phase. What happens if they need to expand?

    1. SEAN Avatar
      SEAN

      I wouldn’t worry, the geniuses throughout Sv with the help of AI will develop a solution that doesn’t cost the taxpayers a dime.

    2. Eric R Avatar
      Eric R

      There is always room. It’s just about real estate use trade-offs.

    3. southbay flier Avatar
      southbay flier

      Oh, there is plenty of room both at the top end of A and the bottom end of B to expand.

      But, there is no reason to do it anytime soon. SJC has lost traffic in both 2024 and 2025 from its post pandemic high in 2023. SJC has never fully recovered its pre pandemic traffic. Gates 1 – 4 or so are currently vacant.

    4. Oliver Avatar
      Oliver

      > What happens if they need to expand?

      Buy OAK and connect with a fleet of Uber ESTOLs.

  2. Gerry Larkin Avatar
    Gerry Larkin

    Crazy to think they’re even thinking about expanding, considering traffic has been declining the last few years, and they’re only at 70% of their pre-pandemic peak passenger count.

    1. southbay flier Avatar
      southbay flier

      The plans have been there since B was built in 2010 and the bus terminal addition was done when traffic was at its peak. I don’t see this happening for a long time, if ever.

  3. southbay flier Avatar
    southbay flier

    The new addition feels a lot like the old gate Western Airlines gate in Terminal C with the jetway starting on the ground. It feels like it was a cheap solution to a temporary problem. Now, AS gets those horrid new gates while there are empty gates on the far side of Terminal A.

    AS has really shrunk their usage of SJC over the last few years. I think WN is down some, but not as much as OAK.

    I’m kind of curious if DL will overtake AS as the second largest carrier at SJC?

  4. JT8D Avatar
    JT8D

    American’s hub 1.0 also had flights to Tokyo.

  5. Angry Bob Crandall Avatar
    Angry Bob Crandall

    And they had a flight to SFO! I took it all of the time. And mostly on. a DC-10!

    1. 1990 Avatar
      1990

      Bah! Even Taylor Swift would blush at the carbon footprint of a tri-jet crossing the Bay.

  6. Robert Avatar
    Robert

    I have such good memories of Terminal C. The observation deck + air stairs boarding was a great combo.

    1. Penny Avatar
      Penny

      I agree with you I’d like that observation deck it was really nice.. but we are going back many many years.

  7. David SF eastbay Avatar
    David SF eastbay

    I lived in San Jose in the days of walking out at ground level to board a PSA/AirCal(Air California)/Western flight. Driving on the freeway south of the runway and having a 707 landing so low to the ground that it felt like it was going to hit you. Those were the days when flying was still civilized and not full of crazy people on airplanes, airlines competed on service and it was fun and exciting to fly.

    Boy did I just age myself saying all that……..LOL

    1. Doug Swalen Avatar
      Doug Swalen

      You left out Hughes and the Big Banana. And private aviation people could walk in and up the control tower. I know because I did in 1979-80. Plus we used to be able to park on the dirt mound at the south end of the airport and watch the planes land…before the jerks fenced it off.

    2. GS in PDX Avatar
      GS in PDX

      David, not sure if you have seen the video, but as a real-life, recent illustration to your point about the 707s landing so low, check out the delivery truck that got hit by a 767 on the freeway outside EWR….
      https://www.bing.com/videos/riverview/relatedvideo?q=united+airlines+plane+hitting+truck&mid=4F9FD5F8FA617CC0EA394F9FD5F8FA617CC0EA39&churl=https%3a%2f%2fwww.youtube.com%2fchannel%2fUCAeWdyKJXGWmVAXFpgLNNTg&FORM=VIRE

      Scary!!

  8. Bgriff Avatar
    Bgriff

    Is “when I was flying out of SJC because I was going to grad school nearby” the West Coast version of “I went to school outside of Boston”?

    1. Brett Avatar

      Bgriff – I don’t think it’s a secret that I went to grad school at Stanford. If someone asks me where I went or if I’m talking specifically about where I went, I say Stanford. But in this case, it wasn’t really a part of the story, so I didn’t bother!

      1. SEAN Avatar
        SEAN

        How do you know if someone went to Stanford? They don’t need to keep on telling you. If you know, you know.

  9. EricAtSJC Avatar
    EricAtSJC

    SJC has been my home airport since 1989, so I’ve seen a lot of these changes. Rather than infrastructure, the interesting question for SJC is why cannot it attract more flights? Yes… SFO is not far to the north… But SJC should have a catchment of high-income folks many of whom have strong international connections. And it should be way more convenient for anyone south of the Dumbarton Bridge. I would have thought SJC the ideal candidate to support the long, thin routes touted for B787s and A350s. I believe the ZIPAIR flight to Tokyo is doing well. I think the BA B787 to LHR did well before Covid. (Seemed full the few times I flew on it.) I’ve never seen a marketing campaign from SJC to drive awareness. (Perhaps they should change their name to San José Mineta San Francisco Bay International Airport.)

    1. Kitsune4px Avatar
      Kitsune4px

      @EricAtSJC my working theory is it’s related to the curfew at SJC. Impacts the ability of airlines to schedule red-eyes and late arriving flights from the East Coast. (both of which are my bread and butter out of SFO when I travel for work). Also, the morning opening time could clearly move a little earlier judging by all the airlines that have flights scheduled to go right when the runway opens for West Coast business travelers. If SJC would move the evening curfew from 11 pm to 1 am, you could potentially shift a bunch of transcon traffic from SFO to SJC, which would help ground traffic at SFO which is always a mess at that time because of the overlap with the Asia/Pacific traffic. I think this is a big deal because when I need to travel to the East, I’d like to fly out of SJC, but typically the non-stop options are mostly out of SFO (UA and non-UA alike); SJC means connecting through DEN/DFW/ORD/MSP/ATL. I almost always prefer the non-stop unless the price premium is outrageous.

      My hope/dream/working theory is that eventually if AS decides to reverse their draw down in the Bay Area when they have more aircraft, they might move to build-up SJC instead of SFO.

      Also, I really miss the airstairs with forward/aft boarding and the dedicated security screening for the 4 AS gates at the old Terminal C.

      Finally, Brett are you as confused by Stanford being in the ACC as I am? Great memories of attending Stanford/Oregon and Stanford/USC football games back in the aughts. Went to a Stanford/NC State baseball game with my kids this Spring and it’s just not the same vibes as a Pac-10 / Pac-12 rivalry.

      1. southbay flier Avatar
        southbay flier

        I think the curfew only affects louder jets. The A220 takes off before the curfew on most days. DL does that daily with their flight to SLC and the last flight from SLC arrives near midnight. I think the MAX can take off before 6:30 as well. AA uses it for its early morning flight to DFW.

        DL does run a daily redeye to ATL, so redeyes can happen out of here. Just not ones to the midwest (and those are evil).

        1. Kitsune4px Avatar
          Kitsune4px

          So double checked the SJC airport notice on the noise curfew. Yes newer stage III aircraft can qualify to fly during the curfew IF the operator provides the airport a copy of the FAA Part 36 noise certificate for that specific airplane (I believe this means by tail number testing to show a particular aircraft is below 89 dBN in the 3 FAA test conditions)

          That seems like a compliance/scheduling nightmare to either qualify your whole fleet or ensure the approved sub fleet is assigned to operate those segments.

          I would be curious to know if any airline has tried to push for more arrivals after 11 pm and/or red-eyes and gotten push back from the airport authority. For a while there was a B6 redeye to BOS that I took a few times. The airport was pretty much shut down, no vendors opens and very minimal TSA staffing. My guess is that’s by design. By contrast SFO is very busy between 10 pm and 1 am.

      2. Brett Avatar

        Kitsune – Confused about the ACC? Not anymore. Sad about the ACC? Absolutely. I used to care a lot about college football, but this realignment combined with some other things that I hate have pushed me pretty far away now.

    2. jerry Avatar
      jerry

      SJC’s catchment area advantage is really not that big compared to SFO. It just results in cannibalization for whatever airline decides to launch flights there. (exceptions include short-haul west coast/Hawaii flying and possibly Mexico)

  10. Cas Avatar
    Cas

    So from the comments I gather SJC’s numbers are down, but I remember Oakland also wasn’t doing so hot – did everyone move to SFO, is there just less O/D demand in the bay in general, or is it all connecting traffic that’s now routed elsewhere?

    1. Brett Avatar

      Cas – I think it’s a mix of things. Southwest definitely pulled down Oakland and built up Sacramento, so that moved some connecting traffic away as well. SFO, however, has been a juggernaut though it’s completely full at many points during the day with the new FAA rules. These other airports will have their time in the sun again eventually.

  11. John Edmondson Avatar
    John Edmondson

    You brought up a couple of memories from HP days. I was in the telecom dept, and we were responsible for setting up and moving the phones and computer terminals in the stations. We were known for pulling off miracles in terms of the time we had to move ticket counters, generally overnight. What we had to do was perhaps not within OSHA standards in Terminal C, I’m just thankful my colleague didn’t fall into the locked gift shop with a cable tied around his waist (we could track his progress by watching the ceiling wave)…I was also impressed that the cleaning crew had a raging fire going in a 55 gallon drum BBQ on the ramp just 20’ from the nose of a 737. We were not invited to share in the BBQ ;).

  12. Bill from DC Avatar
    Bill from DC

    I remember flying into SJC for the first time on United, the so called “nerd bird” from IAD in the late 90s. My first visit to Silicon Valley, I was so excited to step into the technology hub of the world. imagine my surprise when they rolled stairs to the plane and I walked onto the tarmac toward the terminal as if I had instead landed in Pigs Knuckle, Arkansas!

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