MSP runway closure (Aug 18–Sept 26) may raise neighborhood noise

MSP shut runway 12R-30L August 18–September 26, 2025, for FAA-mandated safety upgrades including drainage and Taxiway D reconstruction; remaining runways will see concentrated traffic, altered flight paths, and potential increased noise. MAC provides community outreach, NOC briefings, and a 612-726-9411 hotline for noise reports and updates.

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Key takeaways
MSP closed south parallel runway 12R-30L from August 18, 2025, through September 26, 2025, for safety upgrades.
Work includes runway safety area grading, drainage, shoulder reinforcement, and Taxiway D reconstruction meeting FAA specs.
Residents may experience changed flight paths and increased noise; report disturbances to MAC at 612-726-9411 with date, time, location.

(MINNEAPOLIS–SAINT PAUL) Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport (MSP) has closed its south parallel runway, designated 12R-30L, for a six-week construction project that began August 18, 2025, with reopening planned by September 26, 2025. Airport officials say the work is the second and final phase of safety upgrades required by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). During the closure, aircraft will shift to other runways, which will change flight paths and raise noise levels for some nearby neighborhoods.

The Metropolitan Airports Commission (MAC), which operates MSP, said the project covers runway safety area grading, drainage and shoulder upgrades, and reconstruction of Taxiway D near Taxiway W. The same runway was closed earlier this year, from April 14 through May 23, to complete the first phase before the busy summer season. It is a 10,000-foot east–west runway on the south side of Terminal 1 and is one of the airport’s most used pieces of pavement. With more than 32 miles of runways and taxiways across the airfield, periodic construction is routine to keep the airport compliant with FAA standards.

MSP runway closure (Aug 18–Sept 26) may raise neighborhood noise
MSP runway closure (Aug 18–Sept 26) may raise neighborhood noise

Construction scope and schedule

Airport engineers describe the work as essential to safety. The plan focuses on:

  • Stabilizing the runway safety area — the ground around the pavement meant to reduce risk if an aircraft overruns or veers off the strip.
  • Improving drainage to prevent pooling water.
  • Reinforcing shoulders to support aircraft operations.
  • Reconstructing a segment of Taxiway D where it meets Taxiway W.

All work ties back to federal specifications. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, tight timing around peak travel seasons is common for runway projects, as operators try to limit disruption for airlines and passengers while meeting federal deadlines.

This late-summer window is the final push. MAC paused the project after the spring closure to keep summer travel moving, then resumed in mid‑August for the remaining tasks. If weather cooperates, the south parallel runway should return to service by September 26, 2025, allowing flight operations to settle back into familiar patterns before the holiday period.

While the airport is not closing any terminals, the airfield layout is compressed during construction, which concentrates takeoffs and landings on the remaining open runways. That compression can increase operational coordination demands for pilots and air traffic control.

Noise and community impact

Shifting flights to other runways often moves noise. Several neighborhoods around MSP will hear changes in where, when, and how often aircraft pass overhead. Some areas that normally experience modest activity could see more traffic, while others may notice less.

MAC has stepped up outreach through:

  • Newsletters
  • Meetings of the MSP Noise Oversight Committee (NOC)
  • Public briefings

The committee tracks patterns and reviews mitigation steps tied to MSP’s federal Consent Decree, which includes residential noise insulation and land-use planning in areas affected by airport noise. The 2023 Annual Noise Contour Report shows continued work within the 60 dB Day‑Night Average Sound Level (DNL) contours, where exposure is measured over a 24‑hour period with extra weight on nighttime activity. These programs will continue as the airport completes the safety upgrades and as flight paths evolve.

The FAA plans to roll out new GPS‑based navigation procedures by the end of 2025 around the Twin Cities airspace. These satellite‑guided routes, also called Performance‑Based Navigation, are designed to make flight paths more precise. That precision may:

  • Bring relief to some neighborhoods that currently experience dispersed traffic
  • Increase noise for others that sit directly under the new tracks

FAA officials say precision routes can improve safety and efficiency; communities want clear data on who will be affected and when. The FAA’s public overview of Performance‑Based Navigation is available at: https://www.faa.gov/nextgen/programs/pbn.

MAC and the FAA have said they will keep meeting with residents and local leaders as the GPS changes move forward. Public webinars and community meetings will be announced through the agencies’ websites and local news outlets. Airport staff stress that the current runway closure is temporary; the GPS shift is a separate, longer‑term airspace project.

Important: The runway closure is scheduled to end by September 26, 2025, but the GPS‑based airspace changes are a later, separate effort that could further alter flight paths.

What residents can do now

Neighbors who notice increased aircraft noise can contact MAC’s Community Relations Office. The hotline at 612‑726‑9411 is staffed to take questions and record noise complaints.

When you call, please be ready to provide:

  1. Date of the disturbance
  2. Time of the disturbance
  3. Location (address or nearest intersection)

This information helps the airport track changes linked to the temporary runway configuration. MAC also publishes regular updates on construction status and NOC meeting materials, which explain how noise contours are measured and where mitigation programs apply.

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MSP Runway Closure — Resident Noise-Reporting and Outreach Requirements
Mandatory and optional actions residents must take to report aircraft noise and stay informed during the temporary closure of Runway 12R-30L (Aug 18–Sep 26, 2025)

1
Provide the date of the disturbance when calling MAC Community Relations Office
Required: Report the specific date of the noise/disturbance to help the airport track changes linked to the temporary runway configuration.

2
Provide the time of the disturbance when calling MAC Community Relations Office
Required: Report the specific time of the noise/disturbance to help the airport correlate incidents with flight operations.

3
Provide the location (address or nearest intersection) of the disturbance when calling MAC Community Relations Office
Required: Give a precise location (address or nearest intersection) so the airport can map and analyze affected areas.

4
Call the hotline 612-726-9411 to report noise and ask questions
Required: Use the staffed MAC Community Relations Office hotline (612-726-9411) to lodge complaints and record noise reports during the runway closure.

5
Subscribe to MAC newsletters, attend NOC meetings and public briefings for updates
Optional: Participate in outreach (newsletters, MSP Noise Oversight Committee meetings, public briefings) to receive construction status, mitigation information, and updates on flight-path changes.

Residents can expect the following through September 26:

  • More arrivals and departures using the remaining open runways while Runway 12R‑30L is closed.
  • Different flight paths that may bring louder or more frequent noise at certain times of day.
  • Community updates through MAC newsletters, NOC meetings, and public briefings.

Once the south parallel runway reopens, the airport says traffic should settle back into pre-closure patterns. However, the expected end‑of‑year GPS procedures could shift noise again. That is why MAC and the FAA plan to keep their community outreach active throughout late 2025. Officials say ongoing monitoring, clear data, and accessible reports help people see whether changes are temporary or lasting.

For families living near the airport, even a short‑term change can affect daily routines—sleep schedules, school time, and outdoor activities. The airport’s noise insulation and planning programs exist to reduce that burden in the most affected zones. While not every household will qualify for insulation, tracking noise and reporting concerns builds the record that guides future steps.

Impacts for airlines and airport operations

For airlines and airport workers, the closure is a trade‑off:

  • Concentrating traffic on fewer runways can mean tighter spacing and more coordination for pilots and air traffic control.
  • The closure allows the airport to finish safety work that the FAA requires.
  • The spring closure finished the first phase; this final phase completes the job before winter.

Summary timeline:

MSP Runway 12R-30L Construction & Airspace Changes Timeline
Key dates for the south parallel runway closures, planned reopening, and FAA GPS (PBN) rollout affecting Twin Cities airspace

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April 14, 2025
Spring phase (first phase) runway 12R-30L closure begins
MSP closed the south parallel runway 12R-30L to complete the first phase of safety upgrades.

May 23, 2025
Spring phase (first phase) runway 12R-30L closure ends
The first phase of runway work concluded and the runway reopened for the busy summer season.

August 18, 2025
Current (second/final) closure of south parallel runway 12R-30L begins
A six-week construction project started to complete runway safety area grading, drainage, shoulder upgrades, and Taxiway D reconstruction.

September 26, 2025
Planned reopening of runway 12R-30L (end of six-week construction window)
If weather cooperates, the south parallel runway is scheduled to return to service by this date.

By end of 2025
FAA rollout of GPS-based (Performance-Based Navigation) procedures for Twin Cities airspace
The FAA plans to implement new satellite-guided navigation routes that may further alter flight paths and community noise patterns.

Event Date
Spring phase (first phase) April 14 – May 23, 2025
Current closure begins August 18, 2025
Planned reopening September 26, 2025
FAA GPS-based procedures rollout (Twin Cities) By end of 2025

Community members who want to stay informed can follow MAC’s public meetings and read the NOC work plans and reports. Keep the hotline number handy: 612‑726‑9411. During this closure, those calls and comments help the airport understand how the shift in runway use is felt on the ground.

Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport (MSP) officials say they will continue to share updates as the project progresses. When the south parallel runway, designated 12R‑30L, returns to service, residents should notice flight activity move back toward typical patterns. The airport and the FAA will then turn to the GPS transition later in the year, with more chances for public input.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1
Which runway is closed and what are the closure dates?
Runway 12R‑30L (south parallel) is closed from August 18, 2025, with planned reopening by September 26, 2025.

Q2
Why is MSP closing the runway during late summer?
Final FAA‑required safety upgrades: safety area grading, drainage, shoulder work and Taxiway D reconstruction.

Q3
Will terminal operations or flights be canceled during the closure?
Terminals remain open; flights shift to other runways, which may change paths and increase noise but operations continue.

Q4
How can residents report increased aircraft noise or get updates?
Call MAC Community Relations at 612‑726‑9411 with date, time and location; follow MAC newsletters and NOC meetings for updates.

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Learn Today
Runway safety area → The cleared ground around a runway designed to reduce damage if an aircraft overruns or veers off.
Taxiway → Paved path connecting runways and terminals used by aircraft to taxi between takeoff, landing, and gates.
Performance-Based Navigation (PBN) → GPS-based flight routing using satellite guidance to create more precise, efficient aircraft paths through airspace.
Day-Night Average Sound Level (DNL) → A 24-hour average noise metric that adds a 10 dB penalty for nighttime aircraft operations.
Consent Decree → A federal agreement obligating MSP to provide noise insulation and land-use measures in affected residential areas.

This Article in a Nutshell

MSP closed its 10,000-foot south parallel runway 12R-30L on August 18, 2025, for six weeks of FAA-mandated safety upgrades affecting flight paths, noise patterns, and airfield operations, with reopening planned September 26, 2025; MAC urges residents to report noise and promises public updates and meetings.

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Shashank Singh
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As a Breaking News Reporter at VisaVerge.com, Shashank Singh is dedicated to delivering timely and accurate news on the latest developments in immigration and travel. His quick response to emerging stories and ability to present complex information in an understandable format makes him a valuable asset. Shashank's reporting keeps VisaVerge's readers at the forefront of the most current and impactful news in the field.
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