Jersey Airport

Jersey Airport

Jersey Airport Control Tower
IATA: JERICAO: EGJJ
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Jersey Airport
Serves Jersey
Location Saint Peter
Elevation AMSL 277 ft / 84 m
Coordinates 49°12′29″N 002°11′43″W / 49.20806°N 2.19528°WCoordinates: 49°12′29″N 002°11′43″W / 49.20806°N 2.19528°W
Website jerseyairport.com
Map
EGJJ

Location on Jersey

Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
08/26 1,706 5,597 Asphalt
Statistics (2014)
Passengers 1,495,707
Passenger change 13–14 Increase2.9%
Aircraft movements 49,912
Movements change 13–14 Decrease9.0%
Sources: UK AIP at NATS[1]
Statistics from the UK Civil Aviation Authority[2]

Jersey Airport (IATA: JER, ICAO: EGJJ) is located in the parish of Saint Peter, 4 NM (7.4 km; 4.6 mi) west northwest of Saint Helier[1] in Jersey, in the Channel Islands.

History

Arms and date on the original 1937 tower

Air service to Jersey before 1937 consisted of biplane airliners and some seaplanes landing on the beach at Saint Aubin bay. Jersey Airways and Imperial Airways were among those who operated to the island before the Second World War, but conditions were difficult as timetables were governed by tides. It was also difficult to prevent members of the public from walking across the landing area, and any aircraft which had mechanical problems had to be dragged up the slipways until the tide receded.

The States of Jersey decided to build an airport which opened on 10 March 1937 with four grass runways, the longest being 2,940 ft (896 m) with a concrete centreline. Concrete taxiways were added during the World War II occupation by the Luftwaffe – they also built hangars, one of which, the Jersey Airlines hangar, is still in existence although no longer used. A 4,200 ft (1,280 m) tarmac runway was opened in 1952 and the grass strips were closed. A feature of the airport in the 1950s was the traffic control system – traffic-lights were in place to prevent vehicles using the road from Les Quennevais to the Airport when planes were being moved to or from the hangar used by B.E.A.

The runway was lengthened several times over the years, reaching its current length of 5,560 ft (1706m) in 1976. The runway is 150 ft wide(46m). Additional taxiways were added several years later to improve access to the one end of the runway. However, due to its restricted length, in October 2007 Thomsonfly announced the removal of some services as it introduced the larger Boeing 737-800 to its fleet.[3] Designated 09/27 in 1952, the runway was redesignated 08/26 in October 2014 due to a shift in the earth's magnetic poles.[4]

There were approximately 5,000 aircraft movements and 1.5 million passengers annually at the airport based on 2014 statistics.[2]

Terminal

The 1937 terminal was designed with a control tower between the arrivals and departures areas. The terminal was extended in 1976. A new departures terminal adjoining the existing terminal was opened in 1997. A new air traffic control tower was completed and opened in late 2010, and all major airport operations have been transferred to these new buildings.

Work was intended to begin late 2011 to demolish the original airport building, constructed in 1937 and which contains large quantities of asbestos but work was never undertaken as the building was nominated as a protected historical building. Eventually, on 17 March 2014 it was determined on grounds of aviation safety, that the old terminal building would have to be demolished.[5]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

Airlines Destinations
Aer Lingus Regional
operated by Stobart Air
Seasonal: Cork, Dublin
Air Berlin Seasonal: Düsseldorf, Hannover, Stuttgart
Blue Islands Bristol, Geneva, Guernsey, London-City
Seasonal: Cambridge, Chambéry, Dundee
British Airways London-Gatwick
Citywing
operated by Van Air Europe
Seasonal : Gloucestershire, Isle Of Man
easyJet Glasgow, Liverpool, London-Gatwick
Seasonal: Belfast-International, London-Southend, Newcastle upon Tyne
Flybe Birmingham, Bournemouth (begins 18 May 2015),[6] East Midlands, Exeter, Guernsey, Leeds/Bradford, Manchester, Southampton
Seasonal: Aberdeen, Cardiff, Doncaster/Sheffield, Durham/Tees Valley, Edinburgh, Geneva, Glasgow, Humberside, Inverness, Norwich
GermaniaSeasonal charter: Funchal
GermanwingsSeasonal: Düsseldorf (begins 30 May 2015)
Jet2.com Seasonal: Leeds/Bradford
Lufthansa Regional
operated by Lufthansa CityLine
Seasonal: Munich
Scandinavian AirlinesSeasonal: Copenhagen (begins 9 May 2015)
Vizion air
operated by VLM Airlines
Seasonal charter: Antwerp[7] (begins 18 July 2015)
Volotea Seasonal charter: Barcelona, Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife-South

Some airlines offer services between Jersey and other destinations with an intermediate stop at Guernsey. There are also periodic charter flights to European holiday destinations.

Cargo

Airlines Destinations
Atlantic Airlines Bournemouth, East Midlands

Cargo flights, including daily mail and paper services, which are handled by OceanAir Express Logistics, are operated by Atlantic Airlines and RVL Aviation.

General Aviation

Apart from scheduled airline services, Jersey Airport accommodates a thriving general aviation population, including the Jersey Aero Club. It is also home to the Jersey International Air Display in September each year. Aviation Beauport Ltd is based at Jersey Airport and offers worldwide private charter flights.

Statistics

Flybe aircraft landing at Jersey
Busiest routes to and from Jersey Airport (2013)[8]
Rank Airport Passengers handled % Change
2012 / 13
Airlines that operate this route
1 United Kingdom London-Gatwick537,414Decrease3 British Airways, easyJet
2 United Kingdom Southampton162,128Increase9 Flybe
3 Guernsey Guernsey139,670Decrease1 Aurigny Air Services/Blue Islands, Blue Islands, Flybe
4 United Kingdom Liverpool86,884Increase11 easyJet
5 United Kingdom Birmingham54,973Increase4 Flybe
6 United Kingdom London-Southend52,768Increase50 easyJet
7 United Kingdom Manchester51,168Decrease10 Flybe
8 United Kingdom Bristol39,779Increase18 Blue Islands
9 United Kingdom Glasgow36,403Increase29 easyJet, Flybe
10 United Kingdom Exeter34,773Decrease6 Flybe
11 United Kingdom London-City33,926Increase22 Blue Islands
12 United Kingdom East Midlands26,119Decrease44 Flybe
13 United Kingdom Newcastle18,002Increase47 easyJet
14 United Kingdom Leeds Bradford16,117Decrease21 Flybe, Jet2.com
15 Republic of Ireland Dublin13,291Decrease10 Aer Lingus Regional/Stobart Air
16 United Kingdom Cardiff10,695Increase18 CityJet, Flybe
17 Portugal Funchal (Madeira)10,614Decrease4 White Airways
18 United Kingdom Belfast-International9,193Steady0 easyJet
19 United Kingdom Edinburgh9,187Decrease17 Flybe
20 United Kingdom London-Luton9,009Decrease47 No longer operated (previously by easyJet)

Ground transportation

Road

There are long and short-stay car parks located at the airport, and free parking areas for bicycles and motorcycles.[9]

Public transport

There is a public taxi rank, and bus stop directly outside the arrivals hall. LibertyBus's route 15 connects with the main terminus, Liberation Station, in St Helier.[10]

See also

References

External links

Media related to Jersey Airport at Wikimedia Commons