Lanseria International Airport
Lanseria International Airport | |||||||||||
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Summary | |||||||||||
Airport type | Private | ||||||||||
Owner | Consortium | ||||||||||
Serves | Johannesburg | ||||||||||
Location | Johannesburg | ||||||||||
Hub for | |||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 4,520 ft / 1,377 m | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 25°56′19″S 027°55′34″E / 25.93861°S 27.92611°E | ||||||||||
Website | www | ||||||||||
Map | |||||||||||
Location in Greater Johannesburg | |||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||
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Lanseria International Airport (IATA: HLA, ICAO: FALA) is a privately owned international airport that is situated north of Randburg and Sandton to the north west of Johannesburg, South Africa. The airport can handle aircraft up to the size of the Boeing 757-300.
History
Lanseria Airport started out as a grass strip airfield in 1972, the brainchild of two Pretoria pilots – Fanie Haacke and Abe Sher. The land was originally bought by Krugersdorp and Roodepoort Municipality together with the Transvaal Peri-Urban Board and contracted to Lanseria Management Company on a 99-year lease since 1972.
The airport was officially opened by the Minister of Transport at the time, Hannes Rall, on 16 August 1974. Soon after its opening, Lanseria Airport hosted the Air Africa '75 (in 1975).
When Nelson Mandela was released from prison in 1990 he was flown to Johannesburg landing at Lanseria Airport.
On 15 November 2012 the airport was sold to a consortium consisting of Harith, an infrastructure development fund management company; the women's empowerment company Nozala; and the Government Employee Pension Fund, through the Public Investment Corporation.[1]
On 11 November 2013 the airport opened its new 45-meter-wide 07/25 Runway and also closing the existing 30-meter-wide 06/24 runway. Kulula was the first carrier to land on the new runway.[2] [3]
Aerodrome Information
Runway 07 is equipped with ILS CAT I, and despite the name, is directed at 047° East of North.[4] The single runway has a 1.5% gradient, sloping up towards the South-West end of the runway; despite this gradient, the preferred landing direction is from the South, landing on Runway 07. This is primarily because winds of the Highveld of South Africa are usually Northerly winds, blowing South.
Communications[5] | |
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Tower | 124.000 MHz |
Ground | 121.650 MHz |
Apron | 122.850 MHz |
VOR/DME | 117.400 MHz |
ATIS | 127.650 MHz |
Airlines and destinations
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
Kulula.com | Cape Town, Durban |
Mango | Cape Town, Durban |
FlySafair | Cape Town, George |
Other facilities
National Airways has its head office building on the airport property.[6]
Various maintenance and avionics companies are situated on the airport including Interjet Maintenance, MPT Maintenance, ExecuJet, Lanseria Jet centre and NAC with various other smaller outfits. The maintenance facilities at Lanseria International Airport provide small to midsize aircraft maintenance mainly focused on corporate aircraft and small regional airliners, up to a Bombardier CRJ700 or similar.
Accidents and incidents
- 9 October 1977 – During Airshow Africa '77 – a Britten-Norman Trislander performed a wing-over but had insufficient altitude to recover and the aircraft impacted the runway, bounced into the air and came to rest some 500m further off to the side of the runway. The flying controls were disabled and main gear detached. One wing engine detached. The crew were not injured but the aircraft was written off.[citation needed]
- On 2 October 1993, an Impala Mark I (no. 489) of the SAAF Silver Falcons aerobatic team crashed after suffering separation of the right wing during a performance at the Lanseria Airshow. The pilot ejected but was killed, as the ejection was initiated outside of the design envelope of the ejection seat.[7]
References
- ^ "Lanseria Airport sold". Fin24. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
- ^ "Kulula inaugurates new Lanseria Runway". News24. Retrieved 18 November 2013.
- ^ "New Runway at Lanseria International Airport". Lanseria. Retrieved 18 November 2013.
- ^ "FALA_AERODROME%20CHART_AD-01_11_DEC_202014" (PDF). South African Civil Aviation Authority. SACAA. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
- ^ "FALA_AERODROME%20CHART_AD-01_11_DEC_202014" (PDF). South African Civil Aviation Authority. SACAA. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
- ^ "Directions to NAC Lanseria." National Airways. Retrieved on 18 February 2011.
- ^ "6 March 2009 – New Silver Falcons Livery Now Available for Microsoft Flight Simulator". Silverfalcons.co.za. Retrieved 30 June 2012.
External links
- Lanseria Airport Homepage
- Private site about Lanseria International Airport – History, statistics, airlines, road access, parking, car rental...
- Aerial Photograph on Google Maps