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FLL

Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport

Arrivals and departures, traced from ADS-B data.

Museum-quality gloss aluminum · fade-resistant · ready to hang.

From $119

FLL flight path print — Inferno theme · Dark in office setting [hotspot:55]FLL flight path print — Inferno theme · Dark in living-room setting [hotspot:46]
FLL flight path print — Inferno theme · Dark
Flight report insert
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FLL

Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport

Arrivals and departures, traced from ADS-B data.

Museum-quality gloss aluminum · fade-resistant · ready to hang.

Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport (FLL) is South Florida's second-busiest commercial airport, sitting roughly 3 miles from downtown Fort Lauderdale and 21 miles north of Miami, serving the Caribbean, Latin America, and beyond. This metal print translates that reach into data, rendered from ADS-B flight tracking. Every flight path is colorized by altitude across your chosen palette.

This print visualizes all 4,499 flights recorded May 1-7, 2026, on the 97th anniversary of FLL's founding as Merle Fogg Field. Each one is plotted from real ADS-B data, producing a piece of aviation wall art that locks in a week of South Florida skies at the exact moment a nearly century-old story hit another lap.

$119

Free U.S. shipping

  • Made in the USA
  • Ships in 2–3 Days
  • Replaced if damaged
  • Secure checkout

What's included

  • Gloss aluminum print, float-mount hardware pre-installed
  • Companion 8×8 flight-report print — the airport's routes, aircraft, and traffic stats on archival matte fine-art paper

Inferno · Dark · 8×12″

$119

Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport (FLL) is South Florida's second-busiest commercial airport, sitting roughly 3 miles from downtown Fort Lauderdale and 21 miles north of Miami, serving the Caribbean, Latin America, and beyond. This metal print translates that reach into data, rendered from ADS-B flight tracking. Every flight path is colorized by altitude across your chosen palette.

This print visualizes all 4,499 flights recorded May 1-7, 2026, on the 97th anniversary of FLL's founding as Merle Fogg Field. Each one is plotted from real ADS-B data, producing a piece of aviation wall art that locks in a week of South Florida skies at the exact moment a nearly century-old story hit another lap.

Seth, founder of SkyPath Studio

Made by Seth. Three generations of pilots, one artist.

My grandfather flew a Mooney across the country interviewing farmers as a journalist. My father and uncle fly private. My brother flies as a First Officer for United Airlines. I stayed on the ground. I turn flight data into art.

Aluminum print showing flight path visualization
Premium Material

Why Aluminum

Our prints are produced on museum-quality aluminum with a high-gloss finish, the same material professional galleries use.

Dye-Sublimated

Colors infused directly into the aluminum surface, not printed on top.

Deep Blacks, Saturated Color

High-gloss finish holds sharp contrast across the altitude gradients.

Archival Durability

Scratch-resistant, waterproof, and fade-resistant for decades of display.

Modern Float Mount

Included mounting hardware creates a sleek 3/4" float off the wall.

First order

Take 15% off your first print

Drop your email — we'll send your code and a heads-up when we add new airports.

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SkyPath Studio

Museum-quality aluminum prints made from flight data.

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© 2026 SkyPath Studio. All rights reserved.

Made in the USA
First order

15% off your first print

Enter your email and your code is yours.

Behind the Print

Every ADS-B-tracked flight visualized in this print, captured over 7 days.

4,499

Total Flights

1,712

Unique Aircraft

3,356,598

ADS-B Points

FLL recorded 4,499 flights across seven days in early May 2026, averaging 26.8 movements per hour around the clock. Arrivals outnumbered departures 2,308 to 2,191, a split close enough that neither direction dominated. The 1,712 unique aircraft observed broadcast over 3.3 million ADS-B position points in total. Sunday May 3 was the busiest single day at 1,040 flights, while May 6 was the lightest at 353. The 5 p.m. hour (17:00 EDT) carried the heaviest load of any hour in the week, with 353 movements including 221 arrivals and 132 departures. The traffic corridor runs heavily northward. Both approach and departure direction data show NNE as the most frequent compass heading, followed by NNW and N, with WNW and ESE rounding out the top five in both directions. Atlanta led all route pairs at 195 combined movements, followed by LaGuardia (130), Newark (115), JFK (104), and Charlotte (102). Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago O'Hare, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Baltimore-Washington each contributed between 78 and 97 movements. Of the 1,712 unique aircraft, 1,598 carried U.S. registrations. Canadian-registered aircraft accounted for 49, with smaller counts from the Bahamas, Brazil, Mexico, Panama, and several European registries. The fleet reached a peak recorded altitude of 51,250 feet, with an overall average of 19,264 feet across all logged points. Cruise concentration sits in the 36,000 to 39,000 foot band, which produced the highest position-point counts of any high-altitude range. The longest flight connected FLL to Seattle-Tacoma, covering 2,550.9 nautical miles in just under six hours. Average leg distance across the week was 746 nautical miles, with an average leg duration of roughly 134 minutes.

Every print includes a QR code linking to the flight stats.

See the Flight Stats

What SkyPath Customers Say

5.0

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!

Nathan
7 days ago

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.

About the Airport

Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport opened on May 1, 1929, as Merle Fogg Field, named for a World War I aviator who had purchased an abandoned nine-hole golf course, destroyed in the 1926 Miami hurricane, for $1,200 the year before. It began with 2 criss-cross unpaved runways and was used mainly for small private aircraft. When World War II arrived, the U.S. Navy commissioned the site as Naval Air Station Fort Lauderdale in 1942, paving the runways and constructing a control tower. The base was initially used for refitting civil airliners for military service before later becoming a primary training facility for torpedo bomber pilots. It is also where Flight 19, 5 TBM Avengers, departed on December 5, 1945, before disappearing over the Atlantic.

After the Navy decommissioned the station in 1946, Broward County assumed control in 1948. Commercial service to Nassau followed in 1953. The airport received its current name in 1959, the same year its first permanent passenger terminal opened. Passenger facilities expanded significantly through the 1980s. Terminals 2, 3, and 4 were built by 1986, replacing the 1959 structure. Low-cost carrier growth reshaped the airport in the 1990s, with Southwest establishing a base in 1996, Spirit in 1999, and JetBlue in 2000.

Today FLL operates 4 terminals with 67 gates and 2 runways, handling over 700 daily flights to more than 135 destinations. It recorded 35.2 million passengers in 2024, ranking among the top 20 busiest airports in the United States. Located between Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, and Dania Beach, and adjacent to Port Everglades, one of the world's busiest cruise ports, the airport draws a heavily leisure-oriented traffic mix. JetBlue became the airport's largest carrier in 2026, following the collapse of Spirit Airlines that same year.