Stapleton International Airport was
Denver,
Colorado's primary
airport from 1929 to 1995. At
different times it served as a hub for
TWA,
People Express,
Frontier Airlines
and
Western Airlines as well as a hub for
Continental Airlines and
United Airlines when
the airport was closed. In 1995, Stapleton was replaced by
Denver International Airport.
It has now been decommissioned, and redeveloped as a
neighborhood.
Stapleton highlighted on this map of Denver's
neighborhoods.
History
Stapleton was opened on
October 17,
1929 as
Denver Municipal Airport,
which was later renamed to
Stapleton Airfield
after expansion in 1944. The renaming was in honor of
Benjamin
F. Stapleton, the city's
mayor most of the time from 1923 to 1947,
and the major force behind the project when it began in
1928.
Air disasters
Several major air
crash involved Stapleton
as the origin airport, while only one major air disaster occurred
there.
On November
1, 1955, United Airlines Flight 629
exploded over nearby Longmont, Colorado while en route to
Portland,
Oregon from Stapleton, killing all 44 persons on board. A man
named John "Jack" Gilbert Graham was found to
have planted a dynamite bomb in a suitcase that was loaded onto
the plane in order to murder his mother and collect insurance
money. He was executed two years after Flight 629 exploded. On
August 7,
1975, Continental Airlines Flight
426 crashed due to windshear after taking off and climbing to
100 feet on runway 35L. Fortunately, nobody was killed in the
accident.On December 28, 1978, United Airlines Flight 173, which
took off from Stapleton, made a forced landing near Portland,
Oregon. Ten people died while 179 survived.On November 15, 1987, when Continental Airlines Flight
1713, a Douglas DC-9-14 jetliner, crashed on takeoff
during a snowstorm. The probable cause of the crash was the failure
of the flight crew to have the aircraft de-iced prior to take-off
and the over-rotation of the aircraft on take-off. Twenty-eight
persons were killed, while 54 survived. It was the only fatal crash
at Stapleton.On July
19, 1989, United Airlines Flight 232, a
DC-10-10, crash-landed
at the Sioux City, Iowa airport on a flight which
originated at Stapleton. Flight 232 experienced a catastrophic
engine failure over Alta, Iowa on a flight to Chicago,
Illinois. One hundred and eleven people died in the crash,
while 185 survived.Jet age
The facility received a new
jet runway and terminal building in the 1960s. After deregulation,
three different airlines operated large hubs out of Stapleton
(
Frontier Airlines,
Continental
Airlines, and
United Airlines), leading to large levels of
congestion. In order to combat the congestion, a new runway was
added (36/18) in the 1980s and the terminal was again expanded. At
the time of its closure in 1995, Stapleton sported six runways (2
sets of 3 parallel runways) and five terminal
concourses.
Decommissioning
By the 1980s, plans were
underway to replace Stapleton with a new airport. Stapleton was
plagued with a number of problems, including:
inadequate
separation between runways, leading to extremely long waits in bad
weathera lawsuit over
noise, brought by residents
of nearby Park Hill communitylegal threats by Adams
County to block runway extension into Rocky
Mountain Arsenal lands.While there was ample evidence to
support the argument that Stapleton was truly plagued by these
problems, some people continue to maintain that the construction of
Denver International Airport
was nothing more than expensive politics.
The Colorado General
Assembly brokered a deal in 1985 to annex a plot of land in Adams
County into the city of Denver, and use that land to build a new
airport. Adams County voters approved the plan in 1988, and Denver
voters approved the plan in a referendum in 1989.
On
February 27,
1995, the last commercial
flight left Stapleton, which was replaced by the new Denver
International Airport. Stapleton was closed later that evening, and
a massive
convoy of all
airport vehicles (everything from baggage carts to rental cars)
headed for DIA, which opened the following morning. White "X"es
were placed across all Stapleton
runways to keep
aircraft from landing at the now-closed airport.
DIA dropped DVX and KDVX as its temporary
airport codes, adopting
Stapleton's DEN and KDEN. Visitors to or from Denver at that time
had the unusual experience of arriving at a different airport than
they left the same city from.
All of Stapleton's airport
infrastructure has been removed except for the control tower, which
will remain standing as a reminder of the site's former days. The
parking structure also remains standing.
Redevelopment
Stapleton Redevelopment Neighborhood
While Denver International was being constructed, planners began
to decide how the Stapleton site would be redeveloped. A private
group of Denver civic leaders, the Stapleton Development
Foundation, convened in 1990 and produced a master plan for the
site in 1995, emphasizing a pedestrian-oriented design rather than
the automobile-oriented designs found in many other planned
developments. Nearly a third of the airport site was slated for
redevelopment as public park space.
The former airport site is
now being redeveloped as the largest
new urbanist project in the
United States.
Construction began in 2001, and
as of 2004, over a thousand homes have been built
on the Stapleton site. The new
community is
zoned for residential and commercial development,
including office parks and "big box" shopping centers. Stapleton is
by far the largest neighborhood in the city of Denver, and an
eastern portion of the redevelopment site lies in the neighboring
city of
Aurora. Eventually, Stapleton will be home
to at least 30,000 residents.
External links
Stapleton redevelopment project
Airport
history Stapleton Terminal
History