Salt Lake City International Airport (SLC)

Salt Lake City International Airport AMF Box 22084 Salt Lake City Utah 84122
(5 miles northwest of Salt Lake City)
Phone: 1 801 575 2400 // Fax: 1 801 575 2679
Web: www.slcairport.com

Official Airport Policy

» Link to SLC airport policy

Salt Lake City International Airport has five smoking lounges (one on each concourse). These separately ventilated, enclosed areas are the only space that smoking is permitted inside of the airport.

Notes

There are five smoking rooms in concourses A, B, C, D, and E. Internal tobacco industry documents show that Healthy Buildings International, a tobacco industry front group that touts the "benefits" of "accommodation" and smoking lounge ventilation systems, met with Salt Lake Airport architects to discuss smoking lounge ventilation systems. The document makes suggestions for future plans concerning smoking lounges at SLC and suggests the airport be used as a "demonstration facility."

Please send letters to Director Campbell, urging him to stop protecting tobacco industry profits and clear the air by adopting a smokefree airport policy. Let him know that the Salt Lake City airport's status as a "demonstration facility" for the tobacco industry is nothing to be proud of.

Tim Campbell, Executive Director
Salt Lake City International Airport
AMF Box 22084
Salt Lake City, Utah 84122
Ph: (801) 575-2408 (direct line)
Fax: (801) 575-2679
Email: tim.campbell@ci.slc.ut.us

Airport Photos

sfa-slc-4.jpg
I don't know if these will help or not, but while in the Salt Lake City aiport once I took some photos of the ceiling both inside and outside the glassed-in smoking area to show the difference in color (note that the glass is NOT tinted, and the ceiling tiles started the same color both inside and outside the smoking enclosure). Smoking is prohibited in the SLC airport except for these enclosures, and I've never seen anyone violating that rule.

sfa-slc-3.jpg
I don't know if these will help or not, but while in the Salt Lake City aiport once I took some photos of the ceiling both inside and outside the glassed-in smoking area to show the difference in color (note that the glass is NOT tinted, and the ceiling tiles started the same color both inside and outside the smoking enclosure). Smoking is prohibited in the SLC airport except for these enclosures, and I've never seen anyone violating that rule.