Kulusuk Airport Mittarfik Kulusuk |
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Kulusuk Airport, terminal | |||
IATA: KUS – ICAO: BGKK | |||
Summary | |||
Airport type | Public | ||
Operator | Mittarfeqarfiit | ||
Serves | Kulusuk, Greenland | ||
Elevation AMSL | 117 ft / 36 m | ||
Coordinates | |||
Map | |||
BGKK
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Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
m | ft | ||
11/29 | 1,199 | 3,934 | Gravel |
Source: Danish AIS[1] |
Kulusuk Airport (Kalaallisut: Mittarfik Kulusuk) (IATA: KUS, ICAO: BGKK) is an airport in Kulusuk, a settlement on an island of the same name off the shore of the North Atlantic in the Sermersooq municipality in southeastern Greenland.
Contents |
Airlines | Destinations |
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Air Greenland | Nuuk, Tasiilaq[2] |
Air Iceland | Nerlerit Inaat, Reykjavík[3] |
Unlike the heliport in Tasiilaq on the nearby Ammassalik Island, the airport in Kulusuk can serve STOL aircraft, thus functioning as a mini-hub for Tasiilaq.[4]
Given the increasing number of passengers travelling through the airport due to connections provided by Air Iceland, both domestic to Nerlerit Inaat Airport and international to Iceland, the number of fixed-schedule helicopter flights to Tasiilaq[2] is not sufficient to cover demand, due to a single Bell 212 helicopter of Air Greenland stationed at the airport.[5]
Before Air Greenland took over Air Alpha, flights had been operated on-demand by two helicopters. The problem is acknowledged by Air Greenland, however the final decision regarding expansion belongs to the Government of Greenland.[5]
There is no deicing equipment at the airport, which is costly and problematic in Greenlandic winter.[6] The terminal building hosts a small cafeteria, and a duty-free stand in the departures/arrivals hall. Accessible restrooms are available.
Access to the departures hall is limited due to the need to screen purchases at the duty-free. Passengers are only allowed to pass through the hall immediately before boarding, resulting in a lack of separation between arriving and departing passengers in the waiting check-in hall. Most arrivals and departures are synchronized in time to facilitate transfers between Air Iceland passengers and Air Greenland paseengers bound for Nuuk and Tasiilaq (and to several settlements in the area from there).
The waiting hall is not sufficient to accommodate all passengers, resulting in a pre-boarding chaos.[7] Most flights are delayed due to the policy of deferring departures until all transferring passengers have been distributed to their respective flights, one flight at a time.
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