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  1. Dulles International Airport, Washington, D.C. Dulles International Airport’s three-letter code was once DIA. When handwritten, it was often misread as DCA, another Washington airport. It was reversed to IAD to avoid confusion.

    • How Do Airports Get Their Codes?
    • City Origins
    • Then, There Are Codes That Just Flat Out Don’T Jive
    • Are These Airport Codes backwards? Nope, They’Re Just Backwards Airport Codes
    • Identifying Musical Notes
    • To Hell with Superstition
    • Orly? Lol OMG Sux Grr
    • It Could Be Worse
    • Notable Airport Codes

    During the early years of aviation, an airport was considered any open field with a strong wind, and no formal identifiers were used, or even necessary. As commercial airlines became more accessible and air travel gained popularity throughout the 1930’s, a three-letter system was used to create a seemingly endless amount of combinations — it’s actu...

    To make things easier, airports began using the same two letter city code the National Weather Service assigned to their hometown, then placing an “X” at the end. That’s why we have LAX for Los Angeles, PDX for Portland, and PHX for Phoenix. Many airports simply use common sense. There are those that use their first three letters Atlanta (ATL) Bost...

    Why do airports sometimes use seemingly unrelated codes that don’t match their name? Many of these come from a designation code given to a former or historical name. Take Chicago, for example — in the 1940’s, Orchard Place was a small community just west of the city and the site of a military airport; the airfield was also a manufacturing facility ...

    Politics aside, sometimes things work a little backwards Washington DC — including its airports Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport uses neither a ‘W’ nor an ‘N’, instead going by the code DCA for District of Columbia Airport. After the newer Dulles airport was completed just outside of the nation’s capital, it was assigned the code DIA (Dull...

    Some codes have even inspired songs written about them In one case, the song was partially written by the code itself YYZ is the airport identification code of Toronto Pearson, an international airport located near the hometown of the band Rush. The band received inspiration for a new rhythm using an unusual time pattern as Rush guitarist Alex Life...

    Like Hotels without a 13th floor, Airports can be just as superstitious There is no gate 13 at any of the six concourses at Miami International Airport, and it’s particularly noticeable in Concourse F where F11 and F15 share the same counter, with F13 nowhere to be found. There are also planes without a 13th row, going from row 12 to row 14 instead...

    Codes you don’t have to consult your nearest teenager about. Laugh it up at the expense of some of the more humorously named airports out there, most notably (LOL) Derby Field in Lovelock, Nevada, and (OMG)Omega Airport in Namibia… … and then there’sSioux City’s airport, who after years of petitioning for a new designation, has embraced the name an...

    Some airport codes are enough to make a group of kindergartners giggle. Okay, we did too. If you’re into sophomoric humor, you’ll love taking a flight to PEE, our favorite unfortunate designation, given to Bolshoye Savino Airport in Perm, Russia; our number-two pick is Poco De Caldas Airport in Brazil, better known as POO. Maintenance and upkeep ou...

    Here’s a list of some of our favorite Airport Identifiers and how they came to be known by those letters. ARNStockholm Arlanda Airport, Stockholm Stockholm’s airport is named ARlaNda, a made-up word combining Arland, another name for the nearby parish of Ärlinghundra, and landa, the Swedish verb meaning “to land.” CGKSoekarno–Hatta International Ai...

  2. There are three major airports in the Washington, DC region: Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (airport code: DCA), Washington Dulles International Airport (airport code: IAD) and Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (airport code: BWI).

  3. Ronald Reagan Airport in Washington's IATA airport code is DCA and ICAO code is KDCA. Get to know the Washington Airport's abbreviations, flight and runway data, along with symbols, codes, time zones and more.

  4. Three-letter airport codes are assigned by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the International Air Transport Association (IATA)

  5. Washington, D.C., the capital of the United States, does not have any public airports within its boundaries. However, several airports serve Washington, D.C. Some of the airports are defunct airports, and some are still active.

  6. Nov 21, 2016 · To read more about DC airports, choose from the links below to stories about travel hacks, how to kill time in the terminals, the future of airports, and much more—all from our November 2016 issue of Washingtonian.

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