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Airlines relocate at LAX as major rebuild begins ahead of Olympics

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Airlines relocate at LAX as major rebuild begins ahead of Olympics
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Webp brian
Brian Kelly, Founder | The Points Guy

Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) is preparing for a major transformation ahead of the 2028 Olympics, with Terminal 5 set to be demolished and rebuilt into a modern facility. The current terminal, which opened in 1988 as "Delta's Oasis at LAX," will be replaced by a new concourse designed to meet contemporary traveler expectations.

Hans Thilenius, deputy executive director of terminal development and improvement at Los Angeles World Airports (LAWA), described the project as significant. "This is a really big deal," Thilenius said during a September board meeting. "This is transformative for our guests and our employees, and it's a riveting design — it's gotta have the wow factor."

To accommodate the construction, airlines currently operating out of Terminal 5 are relocating. JetBlue will move its approximately 20 daily departures to Terminal 1 on Tuesday, Oct. 21. Spirit Airlines will shift its check-in desks to Terminal 2 on Wednesday, Oct. 22, with flights departing from the new Midfield Satellite Concourse South (MSC South), located west of the Tom Bradley International Terminal. Passengers will be transported by bus from Terminal 2 to MSC South.

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American Airlines, LAX's second-largest carrier by flight volume, will consolidate operations in Terminal 4 and the Tom Bradley International Terminal starting Oct. 28.

The $1.4 billion redevelopment of Terminal 5 is part of several projects intended to prepare LAX for increased demand during the Olympics. The largest project includes an automated train system connecting all terminals with a new Metro station and consolidated rental car center; LAWA CEO John Ackerman anticipates this will open by June 2026. Other improvements involve reconstruction of Terminal 4 and upgrades across other terminals.

Renderings of the new Terminal 5 show a glass-walled concourse with multiple levels and an outdoor patio accessible to all travelers. Courtney Moore, deputy executive director of strategy, innovation and experience at LAWA, commented on plans for public spaces: "We are going to make sure that it's a lovely space." She added that the terrace would feature telescopes similar to those at Griffith Observatory for planespotting and viewing the surrounding landscape.

Aviation expert Brett Snyder noted in his Cranky Flier blog that rebuilding was necessary due to outdated design elements in the original terminal: "The terminal was built [in 1988] with a weird food concept that saw it go down to a lower level in the middle. The gates on each side sat higher. And many of those gates had just about no room," he wrote.

Snyder also described the planned design as more functional with improved connections between adjacent terminals.

American Airlines stands to benefit most from these changes, gaining preferential use of ten out of fifteen gates when the new concourse opens in May 2028—up from five gates currently used in Terminal 5—according to LAWA board documents from October.

However, American may lose access to its remote regional jet facility known as "Eagle's Nest" once construction is complete.

The timeline calls for closure of Terminal 5 by Oct. 28, three months for demolition, followed by two years of construction—a schedule intended to finish before Olympic opening ceremonies on July 14, 2028.

Ackerman addressed concerns about readiness: "Because our traffic is down, we don't actually need the capacity in this terminal to deliver an excellent experience for the Olympics," he said at the September board meeting. "Our minimum plan is we do the [Terminal 5] headhouse and, kind of, the front five gates and then be buttoned up so it presents a beautiful, excellent experience for the Olympics."

LAWA must decide by mid-2027 whether it can present either a partially completed or fully finished terminal during the games.

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