Home » Do You Know MCO? 6 Stories, Secrets, and Surprises From The Orlando International Airport

Do You Know MCO? 6 Stories, Secrets, and Surprises From The Orlando International Airport

Orlando International Airport. For most theme park fans, it’s the literal gateway to the Magic Kingdom; a waypoint to EPCOT; the official start of a Disney Cruise; a stopover en route to Universal Orlando… and at the end of a trip, the depressing portal back to reality. If you’re reading this, you’ve probably passed through the Orlando International Airport yourself! But how much do you really know about “MCO” and how it connects to Disney World literally and metaphorically?

Today, we’ll take a look at a few of the surprising stories you may not know about Orlando International Airport, as well as dig into the oddities and features of this airport that you know and love. Take your seats; place tray-tables in their upright and locked position, please, as we take off into the true stories of MCO… Speaking of which…

1. “MCO”

Have you ever wondered why the Orlando International Airport – with 27 letters, but no M and no C – got the airport code MCO?

Technically, the Orlando International Airport began its life in 1942 – long before domestic air travel was accessible to the public. That’s because the property was Orlando Army Air Field #2, before being renamed Pinecastle Army Base in 1943. At the end of World War II, the property was even used for prelimary tests of the Bell X-1 rocket engine aircraft, which would later be relocated to Edwards Air Force Base in California where pilot Chuck Yeager would use it to break the sound barrier!

In the 1950s, Colonel Michael Norman Wright McCoy died in a crash at the base, and it was officially renamed in his honor – McCoy Air Force Base.

It wasn’t until the 1960s that commercial air travel began to spread across the country, and given that early jetliners like the Boeing 707 required long, sturdy runways that the small Orlando Executive Airport (IATA abbreviation: ORL) down the street couldn’t handle, the city of Orlando and the United States Air Force came to an agreement: they would share McCoy. The new joint civil-military facility at McCoy Air Force Base was launched in 1962, with the civilian operation branded the Orlando Jetport at McCoy

Obviously, the opening of Walt Disney World in 1971 turned the Orlando Jetport at McCoy into a major hub for air travel. Plus, a draw down after the end of the Vietnam War meant that the U.S. military had dwindling use for McCoy. The Air Force formally exited the facility in 1975. Just as Disney was putting the finishing touches on its brand new Space Mountain and PeopleMover attractions, McCoy was formally renamed the Orlando International Airport, but retained its old IATA airport code – MCO.

2. The “First Ride”

For generations of Walt Disney World visitors, you know you’ve really arrived when you get to that “first ride” of the trip: the Orlando International Airport People Movers. These automated, elevated shuttles connect the airports four “airsides” to the main terminal (where ticketing, ground transportation, shopping, and dining are located), providing many arriving guests with not just their “first ride,” but their first view of Central Florida’s palm trees and sunshine.

Each of the airport’s eventual five People Mover lines have come online corresponding with the associated airside they travel to and from. The first two opened in 1981 when the west side of the current main terminal and the first two airsides (today, containing gates 1 – 29 and 30 – 59) opened. A third airside (with gates 60 – 99) and its People Mover came online in 1992, at which time a shuttle station was built for the final airside (gates 100 – 129) even though it didn’t open until 2000. A fifth route travels nearly a mile, linking to the new Intermodal Terminal where visitors will be able to transfer to the announced Brightline intercity rail system.

Like Disney’s Monorail system, the shuttles themselves have been replaced and upgraded over the years, rolling out new stock on new lines. Currently, the two western terminals and the Intermodal line use newer Mitsubishi Crystal Mover trains; the two eastern lines use original Westinghouse CX-100 rolling stock, maintained by Bombardier – coincidentally, manufacturer of the Disney World’s Mark VI Monorails.

Though the two eastern lines use older trains, there’s a benefit to riding them: some of the messages on board are delivered by Jack Wager – “The Voice of Disneyland” – who you’ll know from one of our quotes that all Disney Parks fans know: “Please stand clear of the doors.” Wagner had initially recorded all of the audio for MCO’s People Mover, and hearing him en route to Disney World is a great piece of continuity.

3. The Carpet

When it comes to social media, you never can tell what’s going to “take off” (pun intended). But somehow, the carpet at MCO has been elevated into a stratospheric icon. It makes sense. When you go to the beach, you take a picture of your feet in the sand. When you’re relaxing in the backyard, you take a picture of yourself in the grass. When you’re laying by the pool, you take a picture of your legs angled at the water. And when you want the world (or at least, Distwitter) to know you’re in Orlando, you take a picture of the carpet.

Obviously there’s nothing particularly artful about the carpet itself – sort of abstract, leaf-like blotches affixed to vertical lines, creating straight vines of beige, mustard yellow, rusty red, and fern green layered against one another on a pine green background. Yet somehow, the pattern has come to exemplify Orlando. It’s a happy sight when you arrive, and a tragic one when you depart.

And like all memes, it’s truly taken on a life of its own. MCO itself has been known to award “carpet socks” to sweepstakes winners, social media followers, and as an honorary “trophy” for local celebrities. They don’t sell the socks (despite the Butterbeer-sized gold mine they’re sitting on) but plenty of Etsy, Redbubble, and Amazon sellers have their own versions, if you’re sold on the sock hype.

As for how the Orlando International Airport’s history interlaces with Disney World’s? Read on…

4. The Disney Airport

If you had asked Walt himself in the 1960s, he would’ve told you that his Disney World would have its own regional airport. Walt’s plans for the “Florida Project” included four major zones: an airport, the Entrance Complex, EPCOT, and the theme park, resort, & recreation area, all connected by monorail lines with PeopleMovers whisking guests to finer points of each from there. 

The powers to build and operate an airport are written into the Reedy Creek Improvement Plan, but like the city of E.P.C.O.T., constructing and maintaining an airport was pretty much off the table after Walt died. Plans for an airport fell out of the Florida Project’s first phase plans. That’s precisely why the Orlando Jetport at McCoy began its expansion, building into the Orlando International Airport we know today. But it’s interesting to imagine that somewhere in the multiverse, Walt Disney World has its own on-site airport (no doubt having grown to an international one today) with flight directly into the magic.

Of course, even in our universe, it was once possible to fly directly to Magic Kingdom. Seriously…

5. Magical Express+

For many guests, the end of Disney’s Magical Express – a shuttle service from MCO included with any Disney Resort Hotel stay – was a very big disappointment. In an era of slashed perks and new upcharges, the end of a longtime and sincerely “magical” guest perk that could whisk you right to Walt Disney World was a major blow. But when Magic Kingdom was new, there was an even more “express” way to reach the park: by plane.

Beginning in 1971, Walt Disney World did operate its own airport – the Lake Buena Vista Airport, then the Walt Disney World Airport – just east of the (now shuttered) Walt Disney World Speedway, running alongside Magic Kingdom’s parking lot. (You can still see the runway – now used as parking and storage, from above.) Basically, guests who flew into MCO (or Tampa’s TPA) would have the unique opportunity to book a “connecting flight” to Disney property on a STOL (short takeoff and landing) craft. More taxi service than flight, this hop-skip-and-a-jump STOL service was certainly Magical Express, plussed!

Shawnee Airlines operated a number of de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter turboprop planes that made the scheduled commutes to and from the Magic Kingdom’s parking lot each day. The 2,000 foot long runway of the “STOLport” also had a surprise: grooves edged into the blacktop (like those on the side of a highway) played the tune of “When You Wish Upon a Star” as planes landed.

Service to and from the Walt Disney World Airport ended in the 1980s (reportedly, because the Monorail extension to EPCOT Center made landing and take-off prohibitive) but it wasn’t until 2017 that the little airport was officially decomission, losing its FAA registration and its IATA abbreviation: DWS.

6. The Future of MCO

In 2021, over 19 million people boarded a plane at MCO, with over 40 million passengers passing through. By that count, it’s the seventh-busiest airport in the country, and with no signs of slowing down. In 2017, that fifth line of the airport’s People Mover was constructed, connecting to the Intermodal Terminal a mile south of the main terminal. And according to the airport, that’s just the start. 

Construction of Terminal C – the first part of a full South Terminal campus built around the Intermodal Terminal – began construction in 2017 and debuted just this month, on September 19, 2022. The new terminal adds 20 gates, but when the full South Terminal is built-out and complete, the $1.8 billion complex will add 120 gates to MCO’s lineup versus its original terminal and four airsides alone.

Just as the original terminal’s four airsides took over 20 years to fully assemble, it’ll be decades before the Airport even approaches this fully build-out South Terminal complex, but the idea of essentially operating two full-sized airports in Orlando should tell you just how high demand is for Central Florida.

When all’s said and done, passengers arriving in MCO will take a People Mover to baggage claim, grab a connecting People Mover to the Intermodal Terminal, then hop on a Brightline Train (or a proposed SunRail extension) to be whisked right into Orlando’s tourist corridor…

It’s funny… That’s not really so different from Walt’s plans for airport-connected city and theme park decades ago! Of course, with Disney first dropping out of the proposal to have a Brightline station at Disney Springs, then suggesting that maybe a train station could be located just outside of Disney property, who knows if the Mouse wants to be a part of this interconnected future. (Universal will be.)

Until then and even after, Orlando International Airport will continue to be a first and last stop for most theme park goers in Central Florida; a serious icon of tourism, and a landmark in millions and millions of vacations each year.

Speaking of trains and planes, we’ve got the perfect “next stop” for you. Whether you’re a Disney history buff or an aviation nut, make the jump to our in-depth history of Disney World’s beloved dark ride through the wonders of the airline age – the Lost Legend: If You Had Wings – for a musical, magical journey sponsored by Eastern Air Lines!