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  2. Seattle Air Route Traffic Control Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seattle_Air_Route_Traffic...

    The Seattle Air Route Traffic Control Center (or ZSE or Seattle Center or Seattle ARTCC) is the area control center responsible for controlling and ensuring proper separation of IFR aircraft in Washington state, most of Oregon, and parts of Idaho, Montana, Nevada, and California, as well as the neighboring area into the Pacific Ocean. [1]

  3. Washington Air Route Traffic Control Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Air_Route...

    Washington Center is the fourth busiest ARTCC in the United States. In 2024, Washington Center handled 2,468,399 aircraft operations. [1] The Washington ARTCC covers 165,000 square miles (430,000 km 2) of airspace that includes airports in Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaware, New Jersey, Virginia, and North Carolina.

  4. Flight information region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_information_region

    A map showing the borders of the United States' flight information regions as well as that of Canada and other neighboring nations. Old Federal Aviation Administration airspace map of ARTCCs in the United States overlaid with what states they cover Flight Information Regions (FIR) of France FIR and jurisdictional airspace in Japan FIR and jurisdictional airspace in South Korea

  5. Why the airspace near Reagan Washington National Airport has ...

    www.aol.com/news/airspace-safety-reagan...

    The nation's busiest runway.An airspace cluttered with passenger planes and military aircraft. A history of near-crashes. And a growing shortage of air traffic controllers available to manage it all.

  6. Airway (aviation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airway_(aviation)

    All airspace above FL195 is class C controlled airspace, the equivalent to airways being called Upper Air Routes and having designators prefixed with the letter "U". If an upper air route follows the same track as an airway, its designator is the letter "U" prefix and the designator of the underlying airway.

  7. Sectional aeronautical chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sectional_aeronautical_chart

    The first sectional chart was published in 1930; in 1937 the full series of the lower 48 states was completed. These early sectional charts were smaller (most covered two degrees of latitude and six of longitude) with the map on one side; after 1950 the legend and index to adjoining charts was on the reverse.

  8. Bellingham International Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bellingham_International...

    The Washington Air National Guard (WANG) once occupied a 7.5-acre site at Bellingham International Airport. The Washington Air National Guard is home of the 262nd Combat Communications Squadron. The 262nd's mission is to train and equip combat communications personnel, where they field, install, operate, and maintain Ground Mobile Force ...

  9. Arlington Municipal Airport (Washington) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arlington_Municipal...

    Construction of Arlington Municipal Airport was approved on February 23, 1934. The first airplane took off on June 13, 1934, and the airport was officially dedicated on July 4, 1935. U.S. Naval Auxiliary Air Station, Arlington, Washington , was established in 1940, when the United States Navy leased the airstrip from the town of Arlington to ...