Isle of Man Airport

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Isle of Man Airport
Isle of Man Airport.jpg
IATA: IOMICAO: EGNS
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator The Isle of Man Department of Transport - Airports Division
Serves Isle of Man
Location Ronaldsway, Isle of Man
Elevation AMSL 52 ft / 16 m
Coordinates 54°05′00″N 004°37′26″W / 54.0833333°N 4.62389°W / 54.0833333; -4.62389 (Isle of Man Airport)Coordinates: 54°05′00″N 004°37′26″W / 54.0833333°N 4.62389°W / 54.0833333; -4.62389 (Isle of Man Airport)
Website www.iom-airport.com
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
08/26 1,754 5,754 Asphalt/Concrete
03/21 1,199 3,934 Asphalt
Statistics (2008)
Movements 41,294
Passengers 754,419
Sources: UK AIP at NATS[1]
Statistics from the UK Civil Aviation Authority[2]

Isle of Man Airport (IATA: IOMICAO: EGNS) (also known as Ronaldsway Airport) is the main civilian airport of the Isle of Man. It is located to the south of the island at Ronaldsway near Castletown, 6 NM (11 km; 6.9 mi) southwest of Douglas, the capital of the Isle of Man. The airport has scheduled services to the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and the Channel Islands.

Contents

[edit] History

Ronaldsway was first used as an airfield in 1929 with passenger services to the UK starting in 1933, operated by Blackpool and West Coast Air Services (later West Coast Air Services). Further services were established by Aer Lingus and Railway Air Services (RAS) from 1934. From 1937 RAS operations from Ronaldsway to the mainland UK were transferred to Isle of Man Air Services. In a 1936 expansion of the Ronaldsway Airport, workers discovered a mass grave believed to hold the remains of soldiers who died during the Battle of Ronaldsway in 1275.

[edit] Second World War

[edit] RAF Ronaldsway

The airfield came under Royal Air Force control at the outbreak of the Second World War. Known as RAF Ronaldsway, it was one of the few airfields that continued operating civilian flights throughout the wartime period.

The airfield was used by № 1 GDGS (Ground Defence and Gunnery School) operating Westland Wallace aircraft, the drogues from these aircraft being fired on from gun emplacements on St Michael's Isle (Fort Island) and Santon Head.

RAF operations continued until 1943 when the airfield was handed over to the Admiralty for further development as a Fleet Air Arm training station.

[edit] HMS Urley

Now a naval air station, RNAS Ronaldsway, the airport was taken out of commission in 1943 for almost twelve months of extensive development. By the summer of 1944 the airfield had evolved from a grass landing area with a few hangars to a four runway airfield with the infrastructure to house and operate three training squadrons using Barracuda torpedo bombers.

Renamed HMS Urley (Manx for Eagle) by the Admiralty operations recommenced in the summer of 1944, the airfield's main role being that of a torpedo working-up station. № 1 OTU consisted of №s 710, 713 and 747 Squadrons, Fleet Air Arm and these operated until the cessation of hostilities in 1945.

[edit] Post-war

Manx Airlines Vickers Viscount taxiing past the airport control tower in 1988

The airport reverted to solely civilian flying almost immediately after the war, but the airfield remained in Admiralty possession until sold to the Isle of Man Government for £200,000 in 1948, far short of the £1 million that the UK Government had spent on constructing the airport buildings and runways, plus the £105,000 that was paid by the Admiralty in 1943 to purchase the site.

Several Manx-based airlines were formed in the early postwar years to operate scheduled and charter services to the UK mainland. These included Mannin Airways Ltd and North-West Airlines (Isle of Man) Ltd. Both had ceased operations by mid 1951.

The Manx Military and Aviation Museum is situated next to the airport and has exhibits and information about the history of aviation on the island.

[edit] Extension

Sculpture by Bryan Kneale called "The Legs of Man" at the terminal entrance.
Front facade of the modern passenger terminal

A project by Ellis Brown Architects began in November 1998 to extend the airport and improve the facilities available to passengers. In March 2000 the new extension was opened, providing a new landside catering outlet, arrivals area, baggage hall and departure lounge. The existing part of the airport was refurbished during this time to provide improved check-in facilities and offices, linked to the extension with a new airport entrance. During the extension and renovation period the iconic Three Legs of Man sculpture adorning the airport's facade was also refurbished.

In March 2006 funding for a further extension was granted by Tynwald to increase the number of departure gates, with work due for completion in summer 2007.

In April 2008 Tynwald granted a major runway extension and resurfacing project at the airport. The runway will be extended by 245 m (800 ft) out into the Irish Sea by the construction of a rock-armoured promontory. It is part of a £44m plan which will also include resurfacing of the runway during summer 2008 and the extension programme that will commence in spring 2008 and is due to be completed by December 2009. It has emerged [3] that the actual runway take-off length was underestimated by 160 metres in the £1.5 million feasibility study. Whilst the study originally looked into the aviation marketing implication of runway length Airport management have now denied that the extension is for the use of heavier aircraft in the future, stating that the resurfacing and extension are to comply with the latest International safety standards.[4]. There has been a significant overspend on the project due to poor forex management of the Euro denominated components of the costs. It is thought that the Manx Treasury Minister may have been referring to the expense of the runway and the additional £6,515,000 control tower project [5] when he stated in his 2009 Budget speech that the Isle of Man could no longer afford "Rolls Royce" projects.

[edit] Airlines and destinations

[edit] Scheduled

Airlines Destinations
Aer Arann Dublin, London-City
Blue Islands Guernsey, Jersey
Flybe Birmingham, Bristol [begins 30 March], Geneva [seasonal], Liverpool, London-Gatwick, London-Luton, Manchester, Southampton [seasonal]
Flybe operated by Loganair Edinburgh, Glasgow-International
Manx2 Belfast-City, Belfast-International, Blackpool, East Midlands, Gloucestershire, Jersey, Leeds/Bradford, Newcastle upon Tyne

[edit] Charter flights

Airlines Destinations
Aer Arann Paris-Charles de Gaulle [begins 20 February]
Flybe Palma de Mallorca [seasonal], Minorca [seasonal; begins May]

[edit] Freight

Airlines Destinations
Air Contractors Dublin
Atlantic Airlines East Midlands

[edit] Statistics

A baggage loading and transport vehicle drives on the ramp at Ronaldsway Airport.

In 2008, 754,419 passengers travelled through the airport, a small increase on the 2007 total of 753,894.[2] Air freight at the airport peaked in the late 1990s at over 4,000 tonnes per annum, however the collapse of Emerald Airways significantly reduced cargo throughput and in 2008 only 595 tonnes passed through the airport.[6]

[edit] Ground transport

Bus services are provided by Isle of Man Transport and routes 1 and 2 serve Douglas, Castletown, Port Erin and other destinations from the airport with hourly frequency, half hourly at peak times.[7] The Isle of Man Railway also stops at the nearby Ronaldsway request stop, making possible a unique opportunity in the British Isles to travel to an airport behind a steam locomotive.

[edit] References

[edit] External links