Air Accidents Investigation Branch

Air Accidents Investigation Branch
Agency overview
Formed 1915
Jurisdiction UK and overseas territories
Employees 49
Agency executive
  • Crispin Orr, Chief Inspector of Air Accidents
Parent department Department for Transport
Website http://aaib.gov.uk

The Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) investigates air accidents in the United Kingdom. There are three categories of inspector: Operations Inspector, a pilot with command experience; Engineering inspector, with expertise in aircraft control systems; Flight Recorder Inspector, with experience in avionics. The AAIB is a branch of the Department for Transport and is based in the grounds of Farnborough Airport, Hampshire.

History

Aviation accident investigation in the United Kingdom started in 1912,[1] when the Royal Aero Club published a report into a fatal accident at Brooklands Aerodrome, Surrey.[2]

The AAIB was established in 1915 as the Accidents Investigation Branch (AIB) of the Royal Flying Corps (RFC). Captain G B Cockburn[3] was appointed "Inspector of Accidents" for the RFC, reporting directly to the Director General of Military Aeronautics in the War Office.[4][5]

After the end of the First World War, the Department of Civil Aviation was set up in the Air Ministry and the AIB became part of that Department with a remit to investigate both civil and military aviation accidents.[6]

Following the Second World War a Ministry of Civil Aviation was established and in 1946 the AIB was transferred to it, but continued to assist the Royal Air Force with accident investigations - a situation which has continued ever since.

After working under various parent ministries, including the Department of Trade,[7] the AIB moved to the then Department of Transport in 1983 and in November 1987 its name was changed to the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB). Latterly, the AAIB has become part of the reorganised Department for Transport (DfT)[8] since 2002.

Organization

The AAIB has 49 employees.[9]

These are:

AAIB Inspectors fall into one of three categories:

There is also a Head of Administration who is supported by two teams, the Inspector Support Unit (ISU) who provide administrative support to the Principal Inspectors and their teams and the Information Unit (IU), who are the first port of call for accidents being reported.

AAIB administrative staff are part of the Department for Transport (DfT) and are recruited according to civil service guidelines.

Investigations

The AAIB conducts investigations defined under one of two categories; "Accident" or "Serious Incident". An "Accident" occurs where a person suffers a fatal or serious injury, the aircraft sustains damage or structural failure which adversely affects its performance, or where the aircraft is missing or inaccessible. A "Serious Incident" means an incident where an accident nearly occurred.

The AAIB is responsible for the investigation of civil aircraft accidents and serious incidents within the UK and its overseas territories.[8] These are Anguilla, Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Gibraltar, the Falkland Islands, Montserrat and the Turks and Caicos Islands.[10]

Headquarters

AAIB head office
Sign leading to the entrance of Farnborough House, the AAIB head office

The Air Accidents Investigation Branch has its head office in the Farnborough House,[11] a building that is a part of a compound within the boundary of Farnborough Airport,[12] located between Aldershot[11][13] and Farnborough.[14] The approximately 1.75-hectare (4.3-acre) head office site, which houses three large buildings and car park facilities,[15] is in a lightly wooded area south of the main runway of Farnborough Airport.[16] The buildings at the AAIB site include an (as of 2005) L-shaped, two storey flat roof office building and a hangar.[12] The original buildings were from the 1970s. Lana Design supervised the construction of a 4,700-square-metre (51,000 sq ft) two storey new addition to the main building. It includes offices, acoustic laboratories and a lecture theatre. The addition had a cost of 2.6 million pounds.[17]

A sub-branch of the Rail Accident Investigation Branch has been operational on the same site since September 2012.

The AAIB site is south of the airfield and east of the Puckeridge Ammunition Depot,[15] and it is located near the Basingstoke Canal.[18] Cove Brook, about 150 metres (500 ft) south of the AAIB head office, runs from the south to the north. The AAIB head office is accessible from Berkshire Copse Road, which dissects through the length of the AAIB head office site.[15] The Borough of Rushmoor stated that the AAIB complex "requires a secluded" and "secure" location due to "the nature of its operation."[19]

Previously the AAIB head office was in Kingsgate House, Victoria Street and before that in Shell Mex House on the Strand in the City of Westminster, London.[20]

See also

References

  1. Hradecky, Simon (8 June 2012). "United Kingdom's Air Accident Investigation Board celebrates 100 years of air accident investigation". The Aviation Herald. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
  2. "Brooklands accident". Flight. No. 8 June 1912. p. 513. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
  3. The London Gazette, 27 October 1916
  4. Supplement to the London Gazette, 7 January 1918
  5. Turner, Charles Cyril (1972) The Old Flying Days, page 72, Arno Press ISBN 0-405-03783-X
  6. Route to Egypt Losses Enquiry, Hansard, 30 October 1919 vol 120 cc914-5W
  7. "Turkish Airlines DC-10 TC-JAV Report on the accident in the Ermenonville Forest, France on 3 March 1974." (Archive) Accidents Investigation Branch. Retrieved on 29 April 2012.
  8. 1 2 "Welcome to the Website of the AAIB". AAIB. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  9. "AAIB Organisation". Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  10. "Aircraft Accident Investigation in the UK Overseas Territories" (PDF). Air Accidents Investigation Branch. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  11. 1 2 "Additional information." Air Accidents Investigation Branch. Retrieved on 2 May 2010. "Air Accidents Investigation Branch Farnborough House Berkshire Copse Road Aldershot Hampshire GU11 2HH"
  12. 1 2 "DIRECTORATE OF ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES REPORT NO.PLN0548 SECTION C." Rushmoor Borough Council. 20 July 2005. Retrieved on 19 October 2010. "The site is to the north of the Basingstoke Canal and comprises a separate compound within the Farnborough Airport boundary, adjoining its southern end. The land is occupied by a number of structures including a large hangar and a two storey flat roofed office building with an L-shaped footprint, together with areas of hard surfacing, used by the Department of Transport's Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB)."
  13. "Department for Transport travel plan: Annexes." Department for Transport. Retrieved on 19 October 2010. "They are based at Farnborough House, Berkshire CopseRoad, Aldershot, Hants."
  14. "The AAIB interim report." BBC. Friday 24 December 1999. Retrieved on 30 September 2010. "The cockpit voice recorder was recovered from the wreckage and was successfully replayed at the AAIB headquarters at Farnborough."
  15. 1 2 3 "Key sites background document." Rushmoor Borough Council. 16 (18/24). Retrieved on 30 September 2010.
  16. "Rushmoor Local Plan Review (1996-2011)." Rushmoor Borough Council. 126 (2/39). Retrieved on 30 September 2010.
  17. "air accident investigation branch (aaib)." (Archive) Lana Design. Retrieved on 19 September 2012.
  18. "Rushmoor Local Plan Review (1996-2011)." Rushmoor Borough Council. 156 (32/39). Retrieved on 30 September 2010.
  19. "REPORT NO.PLN0465 SECTION C." Borough of Rushmoor. 20 October 2004. 33 (2/6). Retrieved on 30 September 2010.
  20. Final report (Archive) Swiss Federal Department of Transport and Power - Translated by the Department of Trade Accidents Investigation Branch. p. 3. Retrieved on 12 May 2012. "Accidents Investigation Branch Department of Trade Shell Mex House Strand, London WC2R 0DP"
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