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.
General Edward Lawrence Logan International Airport (BOS) is New England's primary gateway to the world, the busiest airport in the northeastern United States outside the New York metropolitan area, connecting Boston to domestic hubs and transatlantic destinations. This metal print captures that reach, rendered from ADS-B flight tracking data. Every path is colorized by altitude, and the palette is yours to choose.
$119
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What's included
General Edward Lawrence Logan International Airport (BOS) is New England's primary gateway to the world, the busiest airport in the northeastern United States outside the New York metropolitan area, connecting Boston to domestic hubs and transatlantic destinations. This metal print captures that reach, rendered from ADS-B flight tracking data. Every path is colorized by altitude, and the palette is yours to choose.

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 7 days.
6,485
Total Flights
1,615
Unique Aircraft
4,996,821
ADS-B Points
Logan handled 6,485 flights across seven days in February 2025, averaging 927 movements per day and 38.6 per hour across 1,615 unique aircraft. Arrivals and departures split almost evenly, with 3,234 inbound and 3,251 outbound. Valentine's Day, February 14, was the busiest single day at 1,109 flights, while February 8 saw the lightest traffic at 725. The peak hour across the week was 6:00-7:00 p.m. EST with 460 movements, 235 arrivals and 225 departures. Early morning hours ran sparse, with the 1:00 a.m. hour recording just 15 flights, the quietest of any hour in the dataset. The dominant flow was toward the southwest. SW was the leading approach direction with 1,156 arrivals, followed by W at 667 and WSW at 371. Departure headings mirrored that pattern closely, with SW again first at 1,154. The busiest route pairing was Boston to Ronald Reagan Washington National, with 309 combined movements over the week. LaGuardia followed at 265, then Chicago O'Hare at 221. Philadelphia, JFK, and Orlando each cleared 190 or more combined flights. Altitude data spans nearly 5 million ADS-B position points. Cruise concentrations peaked in the 34,000-36,000 foot band, with the 34,000-35,000 foot range alone accounting for over 213,000 points. The highest recorded flight reached 50,825 feet, a departure to Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport registered to a Brazilian-registered aircraft. The longest flight by distance was an arrival covering 3,428 nautical miles, taking just under 6 hours 40 minutes, operated by a Chinese-registered aircraft. American-registered aircraft made up 1,417 of the 1,615 unique tail counts, with Canadian and British registrations the next most frequent at 52 and 19 respectively.
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.
General Edward Lawrence Logan International Airport opened on September 8, 1923, on a patch of reclaimed land at Jeffries Point in East Boston. It began as a military field used by the Massachusetts Air National Guard and the Army Air Corps, with the first scheduled commercial service, a Colonial Air Transport route between Boston and New York, launching in 1927. Boston's proximity to Europe would prove decisive. After World War II, transatlantic demand surged, and airlines including American Overseas Airlines, Pan Am, and BOAC began establishing routes across the Atlantic, some routing through Shannon or the Azores for fuel. The state legislature formally renamed the airport in honor of Maj. Gen. Edward Lawrence Logan in 1943, and another act in 1954 gave it its current full name.
Today, BOS is the largest airport in Massachusetts and New England by passenger volume, and the busiest in the northeastern United States outside the New York metropolitan area. It covers 2,384 acres, much of it built on landfill reclaimed from Boston Harbor, including the former Governors, Noddle's, and Apple Islands, and operates six runways across four passenger terminals. Delta Air Lines and Cape Air use it as a hub, while JetBlue treats it as a major focus city. The airport recorded 42 million passengers in 2019, its highest annual total to that point.
The airport has a notable place in the superjumbo story: the Airbus A380 first touched down at BOS on February 8, 2010, for compatibility checks, and British Airways launched scheduled A380 service to Logan in March 2017. Terminal E, the international terminal, underwent a $680 million expansion completed in August 2023, adding gates capable of handling wide-body aircraft and expanding customs, baggage, and passenger areas. Logan sits about 3 miles from downtown Boston and is accessible via the MBTA Blue Line, making it the first U.S. airport with a rapid transit connection when that station opened in 1952.