Ireland West Airport
Ireland West Airport Knock Aerfort Iarthar Éireann, Cnoc Mhuire | |||||||||||
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File:KnockAirportLogo.png | |||||||||||
Summary | |||||||||||
Airport type | Public | ||||||||||
Owner/Operator | Connacht Airport Development Company Ltd | ||||||||||
Serves | Connacht, Ireland | ||||||||||
Location | Charlestown | ||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 665 ft / 203 m | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 53°54′37″N 008°49′07″W / 53.91028°N 8.81861°W | ||||||||||
Website | www.irelandwestairport.com | ||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||
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Ireland West Airport Knock (Template:Lang-ga) is an airport located 3 NM (5.6 km; 3.5 mi)[1] south-west of Charlestown, County Mayo, Ireland. 630,000 passengers used the airport in 2008.[2] The airport was formerly known as Knock International Airport, Connacht Regional Airport, and Horan International Airport. Connaught Aero Club[3] and Shoreline Aviation are based at the airport.
History
The airport was officially opened on 30 May 1986, however the first commercial flights operated seven months earlier on 25 October 1985 in the form of three Aer Lingus charter flights to Rome.[4] The opening followed a long campaign by Monsignor James Horan.[4] The airport was intended to bring employment to an impoverished corner of Ireland, as well as allow pilgrims to visit the nearby Roman Catholic Knock Shrine which commemorates an apparition of the Virgin Mary in 1879.
Ryanair commenced flights to London Luton during 1986, with a route to London Stansted added in 1992. By 1988, over 100,000 passengers had passed through the airport. In 1995 Aer Lingus commenced flights to Birmingham.[4]
In June 2003 hundreds of people gathered at Knock International Airport to view a Boeing 747 land with 500 returning pilgrims from Lourdes. The aircraft stood as high as the airport's air traffic control tower. It was the second of its type to land at Knock.[citation needed]
Recent years
Since 2003, low-cost and regional airlines including MyTravelLite, Bmibaby, Ryanair, Aer Arann and EasyJet added several daily flights linking the airport with UK destinations, and though not all routes proved successful by 2005 the airport was handling 500,000 passengers per annum.[4]
Knock was voted Ireland's best regional airport in 2004 and again in 2006 by the Chambers of Commerce of Ireland.[4]
2007 was a record year for the airport, with scheduled transatlantic services to New York and Boston commenced during May 2007, operated by the now defunct Scottish airline Flyglobespan .[5] The flights to the US proved more sucessful than projected by the airline, and the service was to resume in 2008, but the route has since been discontinued due to poor service.[citation needed]
In 2008 a record 629,000 passengers used the airport, a 13% rise compared to the previous year.[4]
Since the installation of the Category II Instrument Landing System in April 2009, only five flights have been diverted to another airport such as Shannon due to poor visibility conditions to date.[6]
Ryanair started a service to Alicante in June 2009. It was the airport's first scheduled European service, it runs from March to October as a summer seasonal route twice weekly on Mondays and Fridays.[7]
August 2009 was the busiest month in the Airport for 3 years, with 81,000 passengers using the airport. Also, the 28th of August was the busiest day in the airport's history with over 4,500 passengers using the facility on that day.[8]
Ryanair announced a new Faro to Ireland West Knock service in December 2009, which will run from March 25th 2010 to October 28th 2010 on Tuesdays and Thursdays. It is the second scheduled European service from the airport. Ryanair have also announced that they will continue to expand services from Knock if passenger numbers continue to grow. [9]
Government assistance
On 21 February 2007, the Government of Ireland announced that it was giving €27 million of capital grant money to Ireland West Airport.
The Airport has stated that it will continue the implementation of its €46 million infrastructural investment programme with over €20 million of spend anticipated for 2008. Work will commence on a number of significant civil and building projects in this year. A €5.5 million extension to the terminal building was completed in April 2009. A extension to the apron will see this more than double in size has commenced. The implementation of Category II Instrument Landing System (CAT II ILS) on runway 27, which will enhance the reliability of the Airport in low visibility conditions, is completed and approved. An extension to the Runway Ends Safety Areas (RESAs) and runway turnpad was completed in 2008.
An additional "Development Fee" of €10 is charged to all departing passengers aged 12 years and over.
Name
In 2005 the airport changed its name to Ireland West Airport Knock. As of August 2009 the Aeronautical Information Publication, including the aeronautical charts available at European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation, show as Ireland West.[1]
Ground transportation
A shuttle bus service between the airport and Charlestown 3 NM (5.6 km; 3.5 mi)[1] links with regular intercity and regional services of the Bus Éireann network. A bus service also operates between Westport, County Mayo and the airport. Shuttle bus services also operate to Claremorris railway station, and car hire is available at the airport.
Airlines and destinations==
Scheduled
Airlines | Destinations |
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Aer Arann | Dublin |
Aer Lingus | London-Gatwick |
Bmibaby | Birmingham, Manchester |
Ryanair | Alicante [seasonal], Bristol, East Midlands, Faro [begins 25 March; seasonal], Leeds-Bradford [begins 25 March], Liverpool, London-Luton, London-Stansted |
Charter
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
Monarch Airlines | Faro [seasonal] |
Dubrovnik Airlines | Split [seasonal] |
Primera Air | Lisbon [seasonal] |
Swiss International Air Lines | Zürich [seasonal] |
Travel Service | Lanzarote [seasonal] |
Incidents and accidents
- On 23 March 2006, a Ryanair Boeing 737-800 "only marginally avoided controlled flight into terrain", during an approach to the airport following a flight from London Gatwick, according to the Irish Air Accident Investigation Unit. An unbriefed descent, as the pilots fixated on reprogramming for a new approach, meant they arrived over the airport at 410 ft with landing gear and flaps up. The aircraft landed successfully following a second approach attempt.[10]
References
- ^ a b c d EIKN – IRELAND WEST (PDF). AIP and charts from the Irish Aviation Authority.
- ^ Knock Airport reports record passenger numbers
- ^ Connaught Aero Club
- ^ a b c d e f "History of Ireland West Airport Knock". Ireland West Airport Knock. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
- ^ New scheduled flights to New York & Boston commence!
- ^ http://www.irelandwestairport.com/utility/news_details.aspx?id=176
- ^ http://www.irishnews.com/break.asp?tbrk=brk&par=brk&catid=5834&subcatid=642&storyid=394440
- ^ http://www.irelandwestairport.com/utility/news_details.aspx?id=177
- ^ http://www.ryanair.com/en/news/rte-en-161209-3
- ^ "Serious Incident: Boeing B737-800, EI-DHX, Ireland West Airport, Knock, 23 Mar 2006". AAIU. Retrieved 2007-12-30.