New York Governor Andrew Cuomo proposed a $10 billion renovation of John F. Kennedy International Airport and surrounding roadways on Wednesday, his latest salvo in a roughly $100 billion push statewide to bring decaying old infrastructure into the modern era.

Cuomo's proposal, based on recommendations from a study panel, would transform the New York City airport by unifying its terminals, which are currently disconnected.

It would also redesign internal roadways to eliminate bottlenecks, centralize parking lots and revamp amenities, Cuomo said at a luncheon sponsored by the Association for a Better New York, a development industry group.

Those changes could cost up to $8 billion, with a proposed expansion of the Van Wyck Expressway, which goes to the airport, costing another $2 billion.

Mass transit improvements - either the creation of a one-seat ride to the airport or expansion of existing capacity - would carry a yet-undetermined price tag. Currently, mass-transit passengers have to take at least two trains or a bus and a train to get to airport.

"This is a race, my friends," Cuomo said, referring to London, Dubai, and other international cities speeding ahead with major infrastructure developments and glamorous, state-of-the-art airport projects. "We sat on our laurels for too long."

Speaking to reporters after the luncheon, Cuomo said the Federal Aviation Administration had "shortchanged" New York on the number of flight slots allowed at the airport. He said officials would urge Washington to authorize more slots.

If it moves ahead, the airport revamp would follow a $4 billion renovation of LaGuardia Airport, the city's other major airport, currently underway via a public-private partnership. Both airports are in the city's Queens borough.
The airports are operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. While LaGuardia is notorious for its decrepit conditions, Kennedy Airport is in better shape, but still ranks 59th out of the top 100 airports in the world, Cuomo said.