occidentalcapital
Senior Member
United Denver service showing larger 737-800 aircraft, replaces A320/A319 service, for August 19 onward - subject to change. From end of October, shows Embraer 175 service (may still change).
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I agree that I wish the airlines would look at both cities but unfortunately they do not. It’s Calgary and the rest of the province. Even our provincial government seems to look at the province that way. What I wish more than anything is that us Edmonton customers would punish those airlines for this thinking. It drives me absolutely nuts that most people I know have no issues travelling through CGY and worse yet most have no issues even driving to Cgy for flights skipping YEG altogether. I just booked a flight to Dubai with a direct flight through Amsterdam and paid about $500 more for the tickets than if I connected through CGY. It sounds stupid but it’s money well spent for me. I know everyone won’t feel that way but it makes me feel like less of a hypocrite if I never ever to go through Cgy. It’s not even an option for me. I’ll fly internationally out of any city in NA before I fly out of YYC.YEG is an excellent airport overall in terms of user experience. It's big enough that it's got a decent amount of amenities (quite a few dining options, big seating areas, lots of bathrooms and places to fill up water bottles, etc), but isn't so big that it feels super crowded like YYC or YVR. Definitely my favorite airport in Western Canada, though it's harder for those other airports (YYC and YVR) as they have a lot more traffic and smaller airports feed a lot of connecting travel into them. The thing that sucks about this arrangement, as anyone who's flown internationally semi-frequently will tell you is that flying out of Edmonton usually requires one or more connections to get anywhere that isn't in Canada or in the western US (sometimes even then you need connections). Edmonton is sort of treated like a 2nd tier airport by a lot of airlines who put all their longer flights through Calgary and consider Alberta covered.
I feel like airlines should start seeing Alberta how it actually is: a bi-centric province, with two roughly equally sized cities. They should be splitting major routes roughly evenly between the two cities, which would ease traffic at YYC and give YEG a few more important flights and get the airport up to speed with what it should be for a city of its size.
When I flew to Singapore last summer I was luckily able to avoid going through Calgary (YEG-SFO-SIN on the way there, SIN-HND-SEA-YEG, on the way back). Flying to Calgary is such a pain, you have to go through all the security and general shenanigan's of air travel, and then are only in the air for like 25 minutes.I agree that I wish the airlines would look at both cities but unfortunately they do not. It’s Calgary and the rest of the province. Even our provincial government seems to look at the province that way. What I wish more than anything is that us Edmonton customers would punish those airlines for this thinking. It drives me absolutely nuts that most people I know have no issues travelling through CGY and worse yet most have no issues even driving to Cgy for flights skipping YEG altogether. I just booked a flight to Dubai with a direct flight through Amsterdam and paid about $500 more for the tickets than if I connected through CGY. It sounds stupid but it’s money well spent for me. I know everyone won’t feel that way but it makes me feel like less of a hypocrite if I never ever to go through Cgy. It’s not even an option for me. I’ll fly internationally out of any city in NA before I fly out of YYC.
When I flew to Singapore last summer I was luckily able to avoid going through Calgary (YEG-SFO-SIN on the way there, SIN-HND-SEA-YEG, on the way back). Flying to Calgary is such a pain, you have to go through all the security and general shenanigan's of air travel, and then are only in the air for like 25 minutes.
I agree that I wish the airlines would look at both cities but unfortunately they do not. It’s Calgary and the rest of the province. Even our provincial government seems to look at the province that way. What I wish more than anything is that us Edmonton customers would punish those airlines for this thinking. It drives me absolutely nuts that most people I know have no issues travelling through CGY and worse yet most have no issues even driving to Cgy for flights skipping YEG altogether. I just booked a flight to Dubai with a direct flight through Amsterdam and paid about $500 more for the tickets than if I connected through CGY. It sounds stupid but it’s money well spent for me. I know everyone won’t feel that way but it makes me feel like less of a hypocrite if I never ever to go through Cgy. It’s not even an option for me. I’ll fly internationally out of any city in NA before I fly out of YYC.
This is a great summary of EIA and my overall experience with it. I really think it's one of the most underrated airports in Canada for user experience and is quite spacious, clean and has decent amenities, especially when you compare it with an airport like YOW (which is quite small and the lack of amenities always drives me crazy when I go visit there).YEG is an excellent airport overall in terms of user experience. It's big enough that it's got a decent amount of amenities (quite a few dining options, big seating areas, lots of bathrooms and places to fill up water bottles, etc), but isn't so big that it feels super crowded like YYC or YVR. Definitely my favorite airport in Western Canada, though it's harder for those other airports (YYC and YVR) as they have a lot more traffic and smaller airports feed a lot of connecting travel into them. The thing that sucks about this arrangement, as anyone who's flown internationally semi-frequently will tell you is that flying out of Edmonton usually requires one or more connections to get anywhere that isn't in Canada or in the western US (sometimes even then you need connections). Edmonton is sort of treated like a 2nd tier airport by a lot of airlines who put all their longer flights through Calgary and consider Alberta covered.
I feel like airlines should start seeing Alberta how it actually is: a bi-centric province, with two roughly equally sized cities. They should be splitting major routes roughly evenly between the two cities, which would ease traffic at YYC and give YEG a few more important flights and get the airport up to speed with what it should be for a city of its size.
To be fair, it is also very much on EIA and the work they do/need to do on reaching out to airlines, which according to the most recent master plan to 2048, there is little ambition to grow connectivity to Edmonton.I really wish airlines would start treating Edmonton at par with Calgary. It's honestly quite astonishing sometimes the growth and perseverance Edmonton experiences given it has everyone working against it.