Arrivals and departures, traced from ADS-B data.
Museum-quality gloss aluminum · fade-resistant · ready to hang.
From $119
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Arrivals and departures, traced from ADS-B data.
Museum-quality gloss aluminum · fade-resistant · ready to hang.
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) is the world's busiest airport by passenger traffic, a connecting hub that funnels the Southeast, the nation, and five continents through a single Georgia facility. This metal print captures that convergence in precise detail, built from ADS-B flight tracking data. Every flight path is colorized by altitude, and the palette is yours to choose.
This print visualizes all 6,585 flights recorded September 15-17, 2025, on the 99th anniversary of the first commercial flight into Candler Field, the founding moment of what became ATL. Printed direct-to-metal on an aluminum panel, it fixes the origin story of the world's busiest airport to a single point in time.
$119
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What's included
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) is the world's busiest airport by passenger traffic, a connecting hub that funnels the Southeast, the nation, and five continents through a single Georgia facility. This metal print captures that convergence in precise detail, built from ADS-B flight tracking data. Every flight path is colorized by altitude, and the palette is yours to choose.
This print visualizes all 6,585 flights recorded September 15-17, 2025, on the 99th anniversary of the first commercial flight into Candler Field, the founding moment of what became ATL. Printed direct-to-metal on an aluminum panel, it fixes the origin story of the world's busiest airport to a single point in time.

Our prints are produced on museum-quality aluminum with a high-gloss finish, the same material professional galleries use.
Colors infused directly into the aluminum surface, not printed on top.
High-gloss finish holds sharp contrast across the altitude gradients.
Scratch-resistant, waterproof, and fade-resistant for decades of display.
Included mounting hardware creates a sleek 3/4" float off the wall.
Drop your email — we'll send your code and a heads-up when we add new airports.
Every ADS-B-tracked flight visualized in this print, captured over 3 days.
6,585
Total Flights
1,242
Unique Aircraft
5,462,700
ADS-B Points
ATL logged 6,585 flights across three days in September 2025, split almost evenly between 3,288 arrivals and 3,297 departures, with 1,242 unique aircraft tracked and 285 additional ground operations captured. The busiest single hour was 1:00 PM EDT, when 445 movements were recorded, 263 of them arrivals. Morning hours showed a different pattern: between 3:00 and 7:00 AM, arrivals outnumbered departures by a wide margin, while the late evening reversed that sharply, with departures accounting for 205 of 285 movements at 9:00 PM and 227 of 268 at 10:00 PM. Monday the 15th was the heaviest day at 2,386 flights, compared to roughly 2,100 on each of the following two days. The Northeast corridor dominated the route map. LaGuardia led all pairings at 158 total movements, followed by Reagan National at 121 and O'Hare at 107. Dallas-Fort Worth, Orlando, Newark, Baltimore-Washington, Philadelphia, Fort Lauderdale, and Denver rounded out the top ten, each accounting for 82 to 106 movements over the three days. Approach and departure headings both showed the heaviest concentration from the northeast, with NE accounting for 675 arrivals and 691 departures. Altitude data across more than 5.4 million ADS-B position points averaged 16,903 feet, with the densest concentration between 36,000 and 37,000 feet. The highest recorded altitude was 48,775 feet, reached by N10HH on a departure to Wiley Post Airport in Oklahoma City. The longest captured flight, flown by N524DN, covered 2,208 nautical miles over 6.6 hours. Of the 1,242 unique aircraft, 1,163 carried US registrations, with Canadian, French, British, and German registrations each contributing a small number of additional aircraft.
Every print includes a QR code linking to the flight stats.
Reviews from customers across our airport print collection.
Great gift to commemorate trip!
We ordered the LHR image (aurora/light) as a gift for our son who is in college and training to be a commercial airline pilot. We had taken a family trip to London and this was the perfect gift for him. He loved the image, and immediately scanned the included QR code to review the flight data that is available to support each map. The quality and delivery timing were exceptional. We will definitely order more!
LHR · London Heathrow
Response from SkyPath Studio
Thank you for your review, Nathan! We wish your son the best on his journey to becoming a pilot.
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport traces its origins to April 1925, when Atlanta's mayor signed a lease on an abandoned auto racetrack on the city's south side. The site was renamed Candler Field after its former owner, Coca-Cola magnate Asa Candler. The first commercial flight arrived on September 15, 1926, a Florida Airways mail plane from Jacksonville, Florida, drawing more than 15,000 spectators. It was busy from the start.
Delta Air Service began flying from Atlanta in June 1930, establishing what would become the airport's dominant airline relationship. During World War II the facility doubled in size under military control, setting a single-day record of 1,700 operations. After the war, passenger traffic surged. By 1957, Atlanta had become the busiest airport in the United States. The current midfield terminal complex, one of the largest construction projects in the South at the time, costing $500 million, opened September 21, 1980, and was designed to handle up to 55 million passengers per year. In 2012, the Maynard H. Jackson Jr. International Terminal opened on the east side of the airport, adding dedicated international facilities connected to seven concourses via an underground automated people mover called the Plane Train.
Today, ATL is the primary hub and global headquarters of Delta Air Lines, which operates more than 1,000 daily flights from the airport to 225 destinations. The airport has held the title of world's busiest by passenger traffic every year since 1998, with the single exception of 2020. In 2024 it served 108 million passengers. Located about 10 miles south of downtown Atlanta, the airport sits mostly in unincorporated Clayton County and is directly connected to the city's MARTA rail network, making it one of the few major U.S. airports with dedicated rapid transit access.