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MCO

Orlando International Airport

Arrivals and departures, traced from ADS-B data.

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

From $119

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

Orlando International Airport

Arrivals and departures, traced from ADS-B data.

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

Orlando International Airport (MCO) is Florida's busiest airport and one of the highest-traffic destination airports in the world, funneling tens of millions of travelers each year into Central Florida. This print captures that convergence, rendered from ADS-B flight tracking data. Every flight path is colorized by altitude, and the palette is yours to choose.

This print visualizes all 2,778 flights recorded from September 19-23, 2025, on the 3-year anniversary of Terminal C's opening. Each aircraft tracked, each path rendered: a piece of aviation wall art tied to a specific moment in MCO's ongoing reinvention.

$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

Orlando International Airport (MCO) is Florida's busiest airport and one of the highest-traffic destination airports in the world, funneling tens of millions of travelers each year into Central Florida. This print captures that convergence, rendered from ADS-B flight tracking data. Every flight path is colorized by altitude, and the palette is yours to choose.

This print visualizes all 2,778 flights recorded from September 19-23, 2025, on the 3-year anniversary of Terminal C's opening. Each aircraft tracked, each path rendered: a piece of aviation wall art tied to a specific moment in MCO's ongoing reinvention.

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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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 5 days.

2,778

Total Flights

1,290

Unique Aircraft

2,175,514

ADS-B Points

MCO logged 2,778 flights across five days from September 19 to 23, 2025, averaging 555.6 movements per day and 23.1 per hour. Arrivals outnumbered departures 1,798 to 980, a roughly 65/35 split that held consistent across all five days. The busiest single day was September 19 with 581 total movements. Activity peaked during the 8 AM hour, which saw 209 flights, including 114 arrivals and 95 departures. A secondary spike appeared at 9 PM with 203 total movements. The overnight window from 1 to 5 AM was the quietest stretch, with hourly totals ranging from 10 to 29. The top route by total movements was Atlanta (ATL) with 105 flights, followed by Newark (EWR) at 99 and LaGuardia (LGA) at 79. The remaining top-ten connections were all Northeast Corridor or Southeast hubs: Philadelphia, Miami, Chicago O'Hare, Washington Reagan, JFK, Charlotte, and Baltimore. Approach traffic came predominantly from the north and northeast, with NNE accounting for 645 of 1,798 arrivals. Departures leaned the same direction, with NNE leading at 249 and NNW second at 185. The 1,290 unique aircraft in the dataset carried registrations from 17 countries, though US-registered aircraft made up 1,158 of them. Canadian aircraft accounted for 46, British-registered 19, and Panamanian and Mexican registrations tied at 16 each. Cruise altitudes clustered heavily between 35,000 and 39,000 feet, with the 35,000-36,000 foot band alone producing 123,679 ADS-B position points. The longest recorded flight connected Portland (PDX) to MCO, covering 2,477 nautical miles in 333 minutes. The highest-altitude track reached 51,250 feet and belonged to a Mexican-registered aircraft.

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

Orlando International Airport (IATA: MCO) traces its roots to a U.S. Army Air Forces installation established in 1942, later redesignated McCoy Air Force Base in 1958. When the Air Force departed in 1975, the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority took over, and the airport was renamed Orlando International in 1976, retaining the MCO code as a tribute to Colonel Michael Norman Wright McCoy. Civilian air service expanded rapidly in the years that followed. The current landside terminal complex opened in 1981 at a cost of $300 million, giving the airport its hub-and-spoke layout: a central landside building connected to airside concourses via automated people movers.

The 1971 opening of Walt Disney World was the turning point. Air traffic surged as Orlando transformed from a modest Florida city into one of the world's premier tourism destinations. Delta Air Lines established a hub in 1987, though it closed that operation in 2007. Today Southwest Airlines is the largest carrier by passengers, and the airport serves as an operating base for Southwest Airlines, Breeze Airways, and Frontier Airlines, with JetBlue operating as a focus city carrier. More than 40 airlines operate over 1,000 daily flights to more than 170 domestic and international destinations. MCO handled 57.7 million passengers in 2025, ranking it 7th in the United States, notable for being a non-hub destination airport driven almost entirely by origin-and-destination traffic.

The airport covers 11,605 acres in Orange County, 6 miles southeast of downtown Orlando, making it one of the largest commercial airports by land area in the country. Its most significant recent expansion was Terminal C, a $2.8 billion facility designed by Fentress Architects that opened on September 19, 2022, adding 15 internationally capable gates and increasing annual capacity by roughly 10-12 million passengers. Terminal C is also the home of the Brightline intercity rail station, which began service to Miami on September 22, 2023, the only intercity passenger rail connection of its kind located inside a U.S. airport.