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Harry Reid International Airport, Satellite D Gates

(Formerly McCarran International Airport, Satellite D Gates)

Project Facts

Status

Construction Complete

Completion Year

1998

Size

1,100,000 sf

Location

Las Vegas, Nevada

Client

Clark County Department of Aviation

Awards

2007. Gold Award for Engineering Excellence

2005. AIA Nevada Merit Award

1998. AIA Western Mountain Region Citation Award

1998. AIA Nevada Honor Award

1998. Southwest Contractor Design Award

1996. Student's Design Detail Award

1995. AIA Nevada Merit Award

TSK was the lead designer for this four-phase expansion of the nation’s busiest tourist airport. Critical issues included celebrating the arrival of the passenger to Las Vegas, establishing visual connections to the city and surrounding landscape, passive wayfinding, and development of back of house functions.

This project is an effort to reinstate the passion of passenger travel originally associated with the civic-scaled railroad terminals of the early 20th century. Major projects such as Grand Central, Penn and Union Station celebrated the arrival and departure of the rail traveler and at the same time represented a gateway to the metropolis. The Satellite D Gates aspire to that earlier ethos, moving passengers through civic-scaled spaces in a structure that overtly expresses its function as a destination airport terminal.

Any passenger terminal must respond to two significant passenger movements: arrival and departure. Passengers arriving in the Satellite D terminal are organized by double height clerestory center bays, which direct passengers to the central hub of the terminal. Here they encounter a condensed version of the Las Vegas Strip, the “Air Strip," which curves around the central portion of the facility, leading to the Great Hall. The Great Hall bisects the terminal hub, straddling the lower level Rotunda and (in the opposite direction) overlooking the airfield through a large freestanding window wall. The junction between the Great Hall and the escalators leading down to the Rotunda Floor features a neon gateway reminiscent of the classic “Welcome to Las Vegas” sign of the 1950’s. The floor of the Rotunda features a cast terrazzo recreation of the Las Vegas air map allowing passengers to recreate their arrival into the city.

As travelers move across this floor to the Airport Transit System Station, they can locate their ultimate destination within the valley. Departing passengers, however, experience this sequence of events in a different fashion. Passengers arriving in the ATS Station are presented with tile murals of 16 major cities. Each mural design was the product of a local elementary school class and represents the excitement of some distant destination. Crossing the Rotunda to the escalators, the Great Hall ceiling soars overhead with a profile similar to the flight path of an aircraft at takeoff. At the top of the escalator, the rising arc of the Great Hall culminates in a large window that focuses on the point of take-off for departing planes.

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