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Lompoc Airport

Coordinates: 34°39′56.23″N 120°28′03.01″W / 34.6656194°N 120.4675028°W / 34.6656194; -120.4675028
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Lompoc Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorCity of Lompoc
LocationLompoc, California
Elevation AMSL88 ft / 26.8 m
Coordinates34°39′56.23″N 120°28′03.01″W / 34.6656194°N 120.4675028°W / 34.6656194; -120.4675028
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
7/25 4,600 1,402 Asphalt

Lompoc Airport (IATA: LPC, ICAO: KLPC) is a public airport located just north of the city of Lompoc in Santa Barbara County, California, United States.[1]

Facilities and aircraft

Lompoc Airport covers an area of 914 acres (370 ha) at an elevation of 88 feet (27 m) above mean sea level. It has one runway with an asphalt surface: 7/25 is 4,600 by 100 feet (1,402 x 30 m).

For the 12-month period ending May 8, 2009, the airport had 30,100 general aviation aircraft operations and 200 military aviation operations; an average of 83 general aviation per day, and 17 military per month. 71 single-engine and 4 ultralight aircraft were based at the airport during that time.[1]

Skydiving operations are held daily during daylight hours at Skydive Santa Barbara.

World War 2

Near the Lompoc Airport the US Navy built the Naval Auxiliary Air Facility Lompoc base for US Navy lighter than air airships during World War II. The bases construction started in December of 1942 and opened with 500 x 1000 foot asphalt landing mat, two blimp mooring masts, and housing for 25 officers and 72 enlisted men. The blimps patrolled the coast for enemy ships. On August 13, 1943, five days after opening, while ground crews manoeuvered ship K-29 in fog in the morning on Circle #2, the blimp's tail pendants hit a high-voltage power line and 11,000 volts arcs through the ship. Four men holding the metal handling bars on the control car were electrocuted and a fifth crew member was seriously burned. The power company was supposed to have moved this power line hazard but had not. These was the only fatalities at the base.[2] [3]

References

  1. ^ a b c FAA Airport Form 5010 for LPC PDF, effective 2009-05-18
  2. ^ Shettle, M. L., Jr., "United States Naval Air Stations of World War II – Volume 2: Western States", Schaertel Publishing Company, Bowersville, Georgia, 1997, Library of Congress card number 96-070565, ISBN 0-9643388-1-5, p. 137.
  3. ^ Naval Auxiliary Air Facility Lompoc