Farnborough Airfield
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Farnborough Airport TAG London Farnborough Airport |
|||
---|---|---|---|
IATA: FAB - ICAO: EGLF | |||
Summary | |||
Airport type | Private | ||
Operator | TAG Aviation | ||
Serves | Farnborough, Hampshire | ||
Elevation AMSL | 238 ft (73 m) | ||
Coordinates | |||
Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
ft | m | ||
06/24 | 8,005 | 2,440 | Asphalt |
Farnborough Airport or TAG London Farnborough Airport (IATA: FAB, ICAO: EGLF) (previously called RAE Farnborough) is an airport situated in Farnborough, Hampshire in England.
Farnborough Airport has a long history of involvement with aviation in the UK. It was the site of the Royal Aircraft Establishment and is the home of Farnborough Air Show. As a result of Government policy a new business aviation airport has been established there, with all experimental aircraft having moved to Boscombe Down. Commercial defence research continues to be carried out in the adjunct Cody Technology Park by research firm QinetiQ.
Farnborough Airport is operated by TAG Aviation, a multinational business aviation operator, with aircraft based in Farnborough, Switzerland, and throughout the USA. Business aviation flying has grown from a low level in 1989 to around 19,000 movements in 2005. The airport is currently restricted to 28,000 movements each year, with only 2500 of these permitted at weekends. TAG is currently trying to raise this cap to 5000 because of the loss of business to other London airports.
After TAG took control of the airport from the Ministry of Defence it invested in a series of new infrastructure projects, including a new radar unit and a resurfaced runway. The most striking development was the construction of a new control tower, a large hangar unit, and finally a brand new terminal building opened in 2006. The designs won local admiration and won a series of awards. The airport is home to a number of the UK's largest business jet companies, including the likes of Gama Aviation and Executive Jet Charter.
Farnborough Airport sees the bulk of its traffic from conventional business jets, such as the Cessna Citation, the Gulfstream, the Dassault Falcon, the Learjet, and the BAe 125. The airport is also popular with operators of larger aircraft, such as the Boeing 737 and Airbus A319 however the use of these types is heavily restricted, with nothing larger than a 737-800 permitted. The only scheduled services the airport see are those operated by BAE Systems, the headquarters of which is adjacent to the airport. BAE operate a BAe 146 on a twice daily shuttle service to Warton Aerodrome, and a regular Beech King Air service to Filton Aerodrome, Bristol, and Walney Island.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Official site
- Farnborough Aerodrome Residents Association
- Article on Construction of the new Terminal Building
- Article on Construction of the Air Control Tower
London: City · Gatwick · Heathrow · Luton · Stansted · Ashford · Southend
England: Birmingham · Blackpool · Bournemouth · Bristol · Coventry · Doncaster-Sheffield · Durham Tees Valley · East Midlands · Exeter · Humberside · Leeds-Bradford · Liverpool · Manchester · Newcastle · Newquay · Norwich · Southampton · Land's End · Plymouth · St. Mary's · Brighton
Scotland: Aberdeen · Edinburgh · Glasgow International · Glasgow Prestwick · Inverness · Sumburgh · Barra · Benbecula · Campbeltown · Dundee · Fair Isle · Islay · Kirkwall · Lerwick · Stornoway · Tiree · Westray · Wick
Wales: Cardiff
Northern Ireland: Belfast City · Belfast International · Derry
Crown Dependencies: Alderney · Guernsey · Isle of Man · Jersey