Myrtle Beach Real Estate

Sunday, December 16, 2007

MB airport lands record year

December 10, 2007
Original Myrtle Beach Online article: MB airport lands record year

More passengers flew into Myrtle Beach International Airport in the first 11 months of this year than in all of 2000, officially making 2007 the busiest year ever for MYR.

The area's aviation industry is coming back from a slump that hit the national travel scene after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The latest passenger numbers released Monday by the airport show that it's on track to tally more than 800,000 incoming passengers this year - around 17 percent more than last year.

Airport, county and business officials said more advertising in key markets, along with several new flights, was responsible for the jump. They pointed to the increased traffic as further proof that the airport needs to expand.

'The additional flights and additional marketing clearly adds up,' said Brad Dean, president of the Myrtle Beach Area Chamber of Commerce. 'We have no choice but to continue to push for some sort of expansion. What that is remains to be seen.'

Horry County, which owns the airport, had been working on a proposed $229 million terminal, but the idea died when a Myrtle Beach community board rejected the location of the new building.

Liz Gilland, County Council chairwoman, said the high passenger numbers are no surprise.
'I think it's simply following every projection we have gotten,' Gilland said. 'It again pinpoints the fact that we are woefully unprepared to handle the passengers that everyone projects are going to come.'

The county has revived efforts to expand the terminal and has selected a project manager for the expansion.

More than 60,000 people flew into the airport in November, a 16.22 percent jump over November 2006. That brings the total to almost 792,900 passengers landing in Myrtle Beach this year through November.

More than 61,500 people departed from Myrtle Beach in November, bringing the total to 795,600 for the year.

The incoming and outgoing number of passengers often differs, depending on which days of the week fall within the month. Sundays are often heavy departure days.

More passengers, however, do not necessarily bring in more money for the airport, said Bob Kemp, director of airports for Horry County.

The airport projects its budget on an annual basis, and the airlines split the cost of running the airport. Each month, the airlines pay a percentage, based on how many passengers they brought in. If all airlines bring in more passengers, the cost per passenger goes down, Kemp said.

In February, Spirit Airlines leapt past U.S. Airways to take the spot as No. 1 carrier into Myrtle Beach by number of passengers. From January through November, Spirit brought in about 296,600 passengers, while U.S. Airways carried in about 234,800.

Reaching one million passengers arriving per year is 'very realistic' within the next few years, Dean said.
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Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Castles and Condos in Myrtle Beach

Like the condos in Myrtle Beach, the annual sand castle tournaments get taller and taller...

Myrtle Beach Has World's Tallest Sand Castle
Sand castle wars" continue between Myrtle Beach, SC and Virginia Beach, VA

Monday, Jun 04, 2007 - 03:16 PM
ABC News

Myrtle Beach, SC -- The "sand castle wars" waged between Myrtle Beach, South Carolina and Virginia Beach, Virginia continue. Myrtle Beach announced Monday, 6/4, that it has built the tallest sand castle in the world, measured at 49.55 feet.

That seemingly gives them the title, besting a record held by Virginia Beach where a 37.9 foot sand castle was erected during last year's Neptune Festival.

How long Myrtle Beach can lay claim to being the king of the sand castles is anyone's guess because the 2007 Virginia Neptune fest won't be held until late September.

For now, though, the sand castle on Ocean Boulevard celebrating Myrtle Beach's annual Sun Fun Festival is a chart topper. And that's even after Tropical Storm Barry damaged the structure this weekend. Barry's winds blew and rains came, but the castle withstood the worse and still beat the previous record.

Sculptors molded over 300 truck loads of sand to form the castle adorned with well known landmarks and advertising logos familiar to anyone visiting the Myrtle Beach area.
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A Real Life Myrtle Beach Castle, The Southwind



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Saturday, July 01, 2006

Myrtle Beach condos and the Pavilion

Burroughs and Chapin's plan to tear down the Myrtle Beach Pavilion has upset tourists and residents alike at every turn. I think everyone will miss the landmarks such as the rides, the bars, the little stores, and the whole package that we've grown up with for many years.

Myrtle Beach Pavilion

But as part of the city's PUD plan, this redevelopment is going to be a fabulous addition to downtown Myrtle Beach, and the area has become rather run down anyway, attracting a little too much of the underworld in such a highly populated area. It will be very good for the whole city, and especially for new condos in Myrtle Beach such as Bayview Resort Myrtle Beach.

A nice article appeared in the Asheville Citizen Times about it, and the feelings of loss that visitors are experiencing, thinking of losing a part of their childhoods...


Redevelopment consumes the Pavilion
by Susan Reinhardt, sreinhardt@CITIZEN-TIMES.com
published June 30, 2006 12:15 am


MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. — Since their kids were itty bitty, Earl and Betty Ann Young of Burnsville have taken them to Myrtle Beach’s most famous meeting place.

The Pavilion Amusement Park, the heart and soul of the beach, where people met, danced, fell in love and rode rides, is closing after this season.

On Sept. 24, after 58 memorable years, this 11-acre Grand Strand landmark will shut down for good.

Located directly on Ocean Boulevard, the Pavilion has always been a family favorite, a place to see and be seen. To ride the rides, eat footlong hotdogs and dance at Attic, a club right on the ocean.

“We’ve been going down there since our kids were small, at least 48 years,” said Betty Ann Young, whose family owns Mountain Air, an exclusive community of homes in Burnsville.
“That was the highlight of our trip,” she said of the Pavilion. “Sam (one of their sons) would beg from the time we left here, until we got there, to be sure we could go down to the carnival. That’s what we called it.”

The Youngs have a place at Surfside, just south of Myrtle Beach, and go down several times a year.

For nearly 60 years, it was the highlight of millions of tourists’ vacations, most of whom spoke the common language: “Meet me at the Pavilion.” It was a place where people gathered, danced, learned to shag, fell in puppy love, some even forming lasting relationships resulting in marriage.
The main draw was the rides, now up to 40 attractions, including the famous carousel and Hurricane Category 5 roller coaster, the log flume, haunted house and others.

Memories will come down with the buildings. And many people who either live or vacation there are heartbroken. MORE...

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