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It is owned by Truckee Tahoe Airport District, [1] a bi-county special district. The FAA's National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2009–2013 called it a general aviation airport. [3] Many U.S. airports use the same three-letter location identifier for the FAA and IATA, but Truckee Tahoe Airport is TRK to the FAA and TKF to IATA. [4]
Tahoe Airport may refer to: Reno-Tahoe International Airport in Reno, Nevada, United States (FAA: RNO) Minden–Tahoe Airport in Minden, Nevada, United States (FAA: MEV) Truckee-Tahoe Airport in Truckee, California, United States (FAA: TRK) Lake Tahoe Airport in South Lake Tahoe, California, United States (FAA: TVL)
Truckee is an incorporated town in Nevada County, California, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census , the population was 16,180, reflecting an increase of 2,316 from the 13,864 counted in the 2000 Census .
Lake Tahoe Airport (IATA: TVL, ICAO: KTVL, FAA LID: TVL) is a public airport three miles southwest of South Lake Tahoe, in El Dorado County, California. It covers 348 acres (141 ha) and has one runway; it is sometimes called Tahoe Valley Airport. Although the airport had almost forty years of airline service, since 2000, it has served only ...
State Route 267 (SR 267), known as North Shore Boulevard, is a state highway in the U.S. state of California.It connects Interstate 80 in Truckee with State Route 28 in Kings Beach on Lake Tahoe's shoreline.
Minden–Tahoe Airport (IATA: MEV, ICAO: KMEV, FAA LID: MEV) is a general aviation airport serving the Carson Valley in Douglas County, Nevada, United States, including the towns of Minden, Gardnerville and Genoa, Nevada; and Lake Tahoe to the west. The airport is about five miles north of Minden.
Truckee station is an Amtrak train station in Truckee, California. It is currently served by one daily passenger train in each direction, the California Zephyr . The westbound train arrives in the morning from Chicago and Denver heading for Sacramento and Emeryville with the eastbound train calling in mid-afternoon.
Once the Central Pacific Railroad was completed through Truckee in 1869, it became one of the city's main economic drivers; the Commercial Row district's businesses mainly catered to workers and travelers on the railroad. The Brickelltown district, meanwhile, housed and served workers in Truckee's other main industry, lumber.