Parking at JFK Airport for 4 days can vary depending on the type of parking you choose and whether you pre-book your spot. Here's a general breakdown of the costs:
Short-Term Parking:
Daily Rate: $35 (cheapest option)
Hourly Rate: $4 (can be more expensive for longer stays)
Long-Term Parking:
Drive-Up Rate: $35 for the first 24 hours, then $17.50 for each additional 12 hours or fraction thereof.
Pre-Book Rate: $30 for the first 24 hours, then $15 for each additional 12 hours or fraction thereof (cheaper than drive-up rate).
Here's a quick comparison of the total cost for parking for 4 days:
Daily Rate: $140
Hourly Rate: $384 (not recommended for 4 days)
Drive-Up Long-Term: $170
Pre-Book Long-Term: $150
It would take too long to walk. It will wear you out. Just take SkyTrain -OR- the rotating free shuttle minibus, which takes about 25 minutes.
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The Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG) is actually located in Northern Kentucky, across the Ohio river from Cincinnati. The distance from downtown Cincinnati to the airport is about 14 miles.
You need to take the A train (of the A-C-E, the blue line). If you're coming from the 42nd Street-Times Square Station (at 42nd Street and 7th Avenue), then you just walk through the tunnel that connects the 42nd Street-Times Square Station to the 42nd Street-Port Authority Bus Terminal Station on the A-C-E line.
If you're coming from 42nd Street-Grand Central Station (at 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue), then first you need to take the S shuttle train (color grey), west across 42nd Street, from Grand Central (East 42nd) to Times Square (West 42nd). Then walk through the tunnel to the 42nd Street-Port Authority Station on the A-C-E line.
Then get on the Downtown A train to the Howard Beach Station. At the Howard Beach Station, get the shuttle (called the AirTrain) which takes you inside the JFK terminals.
140 miles taking this route:
Are you on a flight that has several stops? Did the plane pull away from the gate on time? Do you mean flying time or time altogether?
JFK Airport is large. It has 4,930 acres. The airport has more than 30 miles of roadway.
Yes, eventually. Originally it was called Idlewild Airport. In 1943 it was renamed Major General Alexander E. Anderson Airport, and then in 1948 it was again renamed New York International Airport. After JFK's assassination in 1963, it was renamed JFK Airport.
I would go by train. Trains in Europe run on time and are efficient. There are also plenty of buses. They too are good.
The address is:
Keahole Airport Rd
New York, NY 11430
The GPS coordinates of the airport are: 40.639722, -73.778889
The driving distance is about 180 road miles and the driving time is approximately 3.5 hours.
They have around 4 different runways one of them is just for the short haul flights, long haul flights then the 3rd one is for domestic and then you get the 4th one that is for major flights.
hope this helps if need any more let me know x
The flight time is 3 hours, 54 minutes.
This is 1,952 air miles.
From JFK, take the "Air Train" to Jamaica Station. There, you can catch the LIRR (Long Island Railroad) into Penn Station in Manhattan. From Penn Station, you can catch an Amtrak train upstate to Albany.
When I flew this route it took around 4.75 hours.
Heathrow is slightly closer but there are good transport links to/from both of them.
No, JFK is in Queens, but it is only 3 miles or so from the border between Brooklyn and Queens.