Assigning arriving flights at an airport to the available gates

Unexpected changes in the flight schedules may disrupt the initial aircraft-gate assignments, and result in congestions and delays in getting aircraft onto gates. A mathematical model is developed to assign the flights with the minimum range of unutilised time periods of gates, subject to the level of service offered to passengers and other physical and managerial considerations. (The assignments are expected to be flexible enough to absorb the minor modifications in the flight schedules.) Interactive optimum and heuristic procedures, both utilising lower bounds on the ranges of future solutions, are proposed to cope with the major changes in disrupting the initial gate-assignments. Over randomly generated schedules, 74 flights can be optimally assigned to seven gates within 17 seconds when the gates are re-utilised within 30 minutes after each departure. The heuristic reaches the optimal solution after evaluating at most 20 partial solutions at one level. Over data obtained from Riyadh’s International Airport, the heuristic outperforms the existing practice: On average, 72.03% and 54.28% improvements are obtained on the number of remote served aircraft and towed aircraft, respectively.