Birmingham International Airport (United Kingdom)
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| Birmingham International Airport | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| IATA: BHX – ICAO: EGBB | |||
| Summary | |||
| Airport type | Public | ||
| Operator | Birmingham International Airport Ltd | ||
| Serves | Birmingham | ||
| Location | Metropolitan Borough of Solihull | ||
| Elevation AMSL | 328 ft / 100 m | ||
| Coordinates | Coordinates: | ||
| Website | |||
| Runways | |||
| Direction | Length | Surface | |
| m | ft | ||
| 15/33 | 2,605 | 8,546 | Asphalt |
| 06/24 | 1,315 | 4,314 | Asphalt |
| Statistics (2006) | |||
| Aircraft Movements | 119,490 | ||
| Passengers | 9,147,384 | ||
| Statistics from the UK CAA[1] | |||
Birmingham International Airport (IATA: BHX, ICAO: EGBB) is an international airport located 5.5 nautical miles (10.2 km) east southeast of Birmingham city centre, in the borough of Solihull, West Midlands, England. It is the sixth busiest airport in the UK after London Heathrow, London Gatwick, Manchester, London Stansted and London Luton.
Birmingham has a CAA Public Use Aerodrome Licence (Number P451) that allows flights for the public transport of passengers or for flying instruction.
The airport is close to the M42 motorway and A45 main road. It is also well connected with and served by Birmingham International railway station on the West Coast Main Line.
The airport handled over 9.1 million passengers in 2006, a 2% reduction since 2005, but a 17% increase over the five years since 2001.[1] It offers flights within the UK, Europe, the Indian subcontinent, the Middle East and North America.
Contents |
[edit] History
The airport was opened at Elmdon on 8 July, 1939, and was owned and operated by Birmingham City Council. During the Second World War the airport was requisitioned by the Air Ministry and was used by the RAF for military purposes. It returned to civilian use in July 1946, though still under government control.
During the post-war years, public events, such as air fairs and air races were held on the site. The City of Birmingham took over responsibility again in 1960. Ownership of the airport passed to the newly-formed West Midlands County Council in 1974.
In 1984, a new terminal was opened, able to handle three million passengers a year. A second terminal, "Eurohub", supposedly the first terminal in the world to combine domestic and international passengers, opened on 26 July, 1991 (with Concorde in attendance), more than doubling the airport's capacity. The original art deco 1939 terminal and control tower are still visible, near hangars to the west of the main runway.
In 1983, the airport was privatised, although the local authorities still own a 49% share. On 1 April 1987, the ownership of the Airport transferred to Birmingham International Airport plc, a public limited company owned by the seven West Midlands district councils.
In 1995, the Maglev Airport Rapid Transit system, which had been running between the airport and Birmingham International railway station on a 600 metre track since 1984,[2] was closed due to high cost and problems sourcing parts. A cable driven system replaced the Maglev line and it reopened in 2003.
Concorde made a final visit on 20 October, 2003 as part of her farewell tour.
Take Off, a sculpture by the Polish artist Walenty Pytel, stands in a roundabout on the approach road.
The food court comprises a seating area, a self-service bar, a coffee bar and an American/Italian restaurant. The airport also has other food establishments, including a Burger King and a Frankie and Benny's and several cafe bars. Airside, a new Yates wine bar has recently opened. It also has an airside and terminal-side shopping area, including shops such as World News, Ladbrokes bookmakers and Boots The Chemist.
In June 2007 the airport made headlines when British TV series Tonight with Trevor McDonald revealed the findings of an investigation into airport security. They found that contractors from the company ICTS fell asleep on duty, ignored baggage x-rays and worked under the influence of illegal drugs.[3]
In July 2007, Birmingham airport was voted best Airport in Europe in the 5 million to 10 Million Category.[4]
[edit] Future
The airport has published a master plan for its development up to 2030. This sets out details of changes to the terminals, airfield layout and off-site infrastructure. As with all large scale plans, the proposals are controversial, with opposition from environmentalists and local residents. In particular the requirement for a second parallel runway based on projected demand is disputed by opponents.
The first major element is an extension to the main runway, targeted for completion in time for the 2012 London Olympics. The extension will increase the runway length to 3,000 metres, as well as including a starter strip to provide a maximum takeoff run of 3,150 metres. The airport owners believe there is likely to be sufficient demand for long-range direct services operated by aircraft whose operation would be constrained by the current runway. At 2,605 metres, this is short for an airport with Birmingham's passenger throughput and range of destinations, and limits aircraft to destinations on the east coast or in the midwest of North America, in the Gulf and Middle East, or on the South Asian subcontinent. The construction of this extension to the southern end of the main runway will require the A45 Coventry Road to be diverted into a tunnel under the extended section.
The second element will be the construction of a shorter (2,000 metre) parallel runway, scheduled for 2020. The current cross runway will also be officially closed to allow for apron expansion on both sides of the main runway. Taxiways will be improved to allow for terminal expansion and to improve runway occupancy rates. One new turnoff was completed in June 2006 and has seen an improvement on traffic rates on southerly operations, where the only available option for landing traffic had been to travel to the end of the runway to turn off.
The development of Terminal 1 will see improvements made to the International Pier and a new satellite pier to the north of the terminals. The masterplan also details the need for a third terminal, which will coincide with the opening of the second parallel runway. The planned extension to the main runway will also require a new control tower to be constructed.
It was announced on 26 September, 2007 that plans for a second runway had been scrapped but plans to build another terminal and increase capacity will go ahead with works expected to finish in 2012.
It is estimated that 11 million passengers a year will use the airport by 2010.
The airport announced on 28 December, 2007 that planning permission for the runway extension would be submitted during January 2008, and that the airport's 68 year old cross runway had been fully decommissioned.
[edit] Airlines and destinations
[edit] Terminal 1
- Adria Airways (Ljubljana) [seasonal]
- Aer Arann (Waterford)
- Aer Lingus (Cork, Dublin)
- Air India (Amritsar, Delhi, Mumbai [seasonal], Toronto-Pearson)
- Air Malta (Malta)
- Air Slovakia (Bratislava)
- Air Sylhet (Dhaka, Sylhet, [begins 2008 pending government approval])
- Air Transat (Toronto-Pearson) [seasonal]
- bmi
- bmibaby (Aberdeen, Alicante, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Belfast-International, Bordeaux, Cork, Edinburgh, Faro, Geneva, Glasgow-International, Jersey, Knock, Krakow [begins 12 February], Lisbon, Madrid, Malaga, Marseille, Milan-Bergamo [begins 1 April], Murcia, Nice, Palma de Mallorca, Prague, Rome-Fiumicino)
- BritishJET (Malta)
- Brussels Airlines (Brussels)
- Centralwings (Kraków [begins 1 April])
- City Airline (Gothenburg-Landvetter)
- Continental Airlines (Newark)
- Cyprus Airways (Larnaca, Paphos)
- Cyprus Turkish Airlines (Dalaman, Ercan)
- easyJet (Geneva, Grenoble [ends 20 April])
- Emirates Airline (Dubai)
- Eurocypria (Larnaca, Paphos)
- First Choice Airways (Agadir, Alicante, Almeria, Arrecife, Bodrum, Bourgas, Corfu, Dalaman, Faro, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Grenoble, Heraklion, Hurghada, Ibiza, Innsbruck, Kefalonia, Kos, Larnaca, Las Palmas, Mahon, Malaga, Monastir, Palma de Mallorca, Paphos, Reus, Sharm el Sheikh, Sofia, Taba, Tenerife-South, Toulouse, Varna, Zakynthos)
- Flyglobespan (Toronto-Hamilton) [seasonal]
- Lufthansa (Dusseldorf, Frankfurt, Munich)
- Lufthansa Regional operated by Eurowings (Dusseldorf)
- Lufthansa Regional operated by Lufthansa CityLine (Hamburg [begins 31 March], Munich)
- Monarch Airlines (Alicante, Almeria, Arrecife, Faro, Ibiza, Mahon, Malaga, Murcia, Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife-South)
- MyTravel Airways (Agadir, Alicante, Almeria, Arrecife, Bodrum, Cancun, Dalaman, Faro, Fuerteventura, Girona, Heraklion, Ibiza, Kefalonia, Kos, Larnaca, Las Palmas, Mahon, Malaga, Malta, Monastir, Orlando-Sanford, Palma de Mallorca, Paphos, Reus, Rhodes, Sharm El Sheikh, Tenerife South, Zakynthos)
- Norwegian Air Shuttle (Warsaw [ends 28 March])
- Onur Air (Antalya, Bodrum, Dalaman, Izmir)
- Pakistan International Airlines (Islamabad)
- Royal Bengal Airlines (Dhaka, Sylhet [begins late 2008 pending government approval])
- Ryanair (Barcelona-Girona [begins 1 April], Dublin, Marseille [begins 1 May], Pisa [begins 2 April], Shannon)
- SAS (Copenhagen)
- SkyEurope (Bratislava)
- Thomas Cook Airlines (Alicante, Antalya, Arrecife, Bodrum, Bourgas, Cancun, Corfu, Dalaman, Faro, Fuerteventura, Girona, Herakion, Ibiza, Izmir, Larnaca, Las Palmas, Lyon, Mahon, Malaga, Malta, Monastir, Orlando-Sanford, Palma de Mallorca, Paphos, Reus, Rhodes, Salzburg, Tenerife-South, Thessalonika, Toronto-Pearson, Zakynthos)
- Thomsonfly (Alicante, Antalya, Arrecife, Barcelona-Girona, Bodrum, Bourgas, Bridgetown, Cancun, Chania, Corfu, Dalaman, Faro, Fuerteventura, Geneva, Goa, Grenoble, Heraklion, Ibiza, Innsbruck, Izmir, Kavala, Kefalonia, Kos, Larnaca, La Romana [begins 21 December], Las Palmas, Luxor, Lyon, Mahon, Malaga, Malta, Monastir, Montego Bay [begins 3 May], Murcia, Naples, New Orleans, Orlando-Sanford, Palma de Mallorca, Paphos, Puerto Plata, Pula, Punta Cana [begins 10 May], Reus, Sal - Cape Verde Islands, Santo Domingo, Salzburg, Sharm el Sheikh, Sofia, Tenerife-South, Thessalonika, Turin, Varna, Venice, Verona, Zakynthos)
- Turkish Airlines (Istanbul-Ataturk [begins 31 March])
- Turkmenistan Airlines (Ashkhabad)
- TUIfly (Cologne/Bonn) [ends 13 January]
- XL Airways (Chania, Corfu, Dalaman, Hurghada, Kalamata, Kavala, Larnaca, Paphos, Salzburg, Santorini, Sharm el Sheikh, Skiathos, Volos)
[edit] Terminal 2
- Air France
- Eastern Airways (Inverness, Isle of Man, Newcastle)
- Flybe (Aberdeen, Belfast-City, Berne [seasonal], Brest, Chambery [seasonal], Dubrovnik, Dusseldorf, Edinburgh, Frankfurt, Galway, Geneva [seasonal], Glasgow-International, Guernsey, Hamburg, Hannover, Inverness [begins 30 March], Isle of Man, Jersey, La Rochelle [seasonal], Milan-Malpensa, Newquay [begins 1 April], Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Stuttgart, Split [begins 10 May], Toulouse)
- KLM (Amsterdam)
- operated by KLM Cityhopper (Amsterdam)
- Swiss International Air Lines (Zurich)
[edit] Cargo airlines
- FedEx (Paris-Charles de Gaulle)
[edit] Incidents
- On the morning of 4 January, 2002 a Bombardier-CL604 business jet crashed on take-off from runway 15 at Birmingham.[5] The aircraft with registration N90AG was on lease by AGCO corporation and was carrying two company executives, two pilots and an observer. After arriving from West Palm Beach Airport the previous evening, the aircraft was parked overnight at Birmingham where ice formed on the wings due to the cold weather conditions. The following morning the pilots did not request de-icing of the aircraft before their flight to Bangor Airport in Maine. The ice on the wings caused one wing to dip on take off, the aircraft inverted, crashed into grass besides the runway and caught fire. There were no survivors. Sleeping pills taken by both pilots the night before the crash are thought to have been a factor in reducing the pilots' judgment.
- On 15 June, 2006 a TNT Airways cargo 737-300 made an emergency landing at Birmingham with damaged landing gear.[6] The aircraft, registration OO-TND, had been flying from Liege in Belgium to London Stansted Airport. Due to poor visibility at Stansted the flight diverted to East Midlands Airport. As the weather at East Midlands was also poor, the aircraft performed a full autopilot approach. During this approach the autopilot momentarily disengaged causing it to deviate from the course. The aircraft hit the grass to the side of the runway, which caused the right main gear to detach. The crew initiated a go-around, declared an emergency and diverted to Birmingham. After it landed on Birmingham's main runway, the airport was closed for a number of hours. The pilots were unharmed.[7] However, the company ascribed the incident to human error and both pilots were dismissed.[8]
- On 23 February, 2006, a Mahan Air Airbus A310 operating a flight from Tehran, Iran, was involved in a serious incident while on approach to Birmingham International Airport. The aircraft descended to the published minimum descent altitude of 740 ft despite still being 11 nm from the runway threshold. At a point 6 nm from the runway the aircraft had descended to an altitude of 660 ft, which was 164 ft above ground level. Having noticed the descent profile, Birmingham Air Traffic Control issued an immediate climb instruction to the aircraft, however, the crew had already commenced a missed approach, having received a GPWS alert. The aircraft was radar vectored for a second approach during which the flight crew again initiated an early descent. On this occasion, the radar controller instructed the crew to maintain their altitude and the crew successfully completed the approach to a safe landing. The accident investigation determined that the primary cause was use of the incorrect DME for the approach, combined with a substantial breakdown in Crew Resource Management. Three safety recommendations were made.[9]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b Aircraft Movements, Air Passengers by Type and Nationality of Operator
- ^ Vladimir Zakian (2005). Control Systems Design: A New Framework. Springer, 328. ISBN 1852339136.
- ^ ITV webpage on the Tonight programme
- ^ Birmingham Airport Award. Airports Council International. Retrieved on 2007-11-27.
- ^ "AAIB Report on N90AG accident"
- ^ "AAIB Report on OO=TND incident"
- ^ "Aviation safety network summary of TNT accident"
- ^ "BBC News article, 27 July 2006 - Cargo plane crash pilots sacked"
- ^ Report on the serious incident to Airbus A310-304, registration F-OJHI, on approach to Birmingham International Airport on 23 February 2006. UK AAIB. Retrieved on 2007-12-28.
[edit] External links
fr:aéroport international de Birmingham lmo:Birmingham International Airport (UK) ja:バーミンガム国際空港 no:Birmingham internasjonale lufthavn pms:Birmingham International Airport (UK) pl:Port lotniczy Birmingham fi:Birminghamin kansainvälinen lentoasema (Englanti)

