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Gold Coast Airport - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gold Coast Airport

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gold Coast Airport

IATA: OOL – ICAO: YBCG
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Queensland Airports Limited
Location Gold Coast, Queensland
Elevation AMSL 21 ft / 6 m
Coordinates 28°09′52″S 153°30′17″E / -28.16444, 153.50472
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
14/32 2,500 8,200 Asphalt
17/35 582 1,909 Asphalt

Gold Coast Airport, or Coolangatta Airport, (IATA: OOLICAO: YBCG) is an Australian domestic and international airport on the Gold Coast and is located some 100 kilometres south of Brisbane. The entrance to the airport is situated in the suburb of Bilinga on the Gold Coast. The runway itself straddles 5 suburbs of twin cities across the state border of Queensland and New South Wales. During summer these states are in two different time zones.

Gold Coast Airport is the fastest growing airport in Australia, and has handled during financial year 2006/2007 more than 3.7 million passengers. 352,554 visitors passed through the airport in January 2007, which represents an all-time high of passengers handled in a single month by Gold Coast Airport.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

Gold Coast Airport Statistics[2]
Year Total Passengers
2000-01 1,896,170
2001-02 1,724,107
2002-03 2,215,188
2003-04 2,576,940
2004-05 3,212,036
2005-06 3,581,646
2006-07 3,753,538

Until 1999, the airport was known as Coolangatta Airport. It originally consisted (1936) of three grass strips with the intention of only providing emergency landing ground for airmail aircraft transiting between Brisbane and Sydney.[citation needed] Finally, passenger flights took off for the first time in 1939, using the then grassy field of the current Coolangatta site.[citation needed] Regular services were started by Queensland Airlines and Butler Air Transport after the Second World War. Ansett started its own services in 1950 using DC-3s, while Trans Australia Airlines did the same in 1954 using DC-3s too as well as DC-4s and Convairs to link other Australian cities.[citation needed]

By 1958, the taxiways and runways were fully-paved, with the later being upgraded a decade later to allow jet operations with DC-9 and L-188 Electra aircraft to began. The current terminal, entitled Eric Robinson Building, was officially opened in 1981 by Acting Prime Minister Douglas Anthony, when at the time more than 650,000 passengers were using the airport. The following year, the main runway was lengthened to 2042m, thus permitting the use of wide-body jets by the two domestic operators Ansett Airlines and Trans Australia Airlines and their Boeing 767 and Airbus A300 respectively on flights from Melbourne and Sydney.

On January 1, 1988, the airport ownership was transferred from the government to the Federal Airport Corporation. Its full privatisation occurred a decade later, when it was taken over by QAL - Queensland Airport Limited on May 29, 1998. By 1999, the company's name had changed to become GCAL - Gold Coast Airport Limited.[3] Despite the name change, Gold Coast Airport still carries IATA Airport Code, OOL.

In 1990, the airport welcomed its first international charter service from New Zealand, and by 1998, Air New Zealand low-cost subsidiary Freedom Air started scheduled no-frills service from Hamilton, New Zealand with Boeing 737s. In 2007, the airport celebrated the arrival of Air Asia X, which began services directly to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. By January 2008, the route has proved so popular, that all flights up to the month of March were completely booked. Air Asia X has announced they may begin a daily service from later this year.

[edit] Infrastructure

Eric Robinson terminal from inside an Airbus A320
Eric Robinson terminal from inside an Airbus A320

It is anticipated that a railway station will be constructed at the airport when the Gold Coast Line is extended. The Tugun Bypass soon to be open will provide links to the Airport and the bypass even goes under the new runway.[4]

The airport opened an extension to the main runway as well as a full length parallel taxiway in May 2007. The runway will be 2500m/8200ft long, allowing for heavier aircraft with greater range to take off. [5] On 16 May 2007, the runway extension was officially inaugurated by Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Transport and Regional Services, the Hon Mark Vaile MP.[6]

Gold Coast Airport has appointed ADCO Constructions as the principal design and construct contractor for a $100 million redevelopment of the airport’s main terminal. Scheduled to start in early 2008, stage one of the project will double the size of the existing facility to almost 27,000 square metres, incorporating domestic and international operations with self service kiosks and 40 common user check-in desks. The works will accommodate forecast growth for the next 10 years with a further expansion, stage two, scheduled to kick in upon demand. The main terminal – incorporating T1 and T2 - currently houses operations for Qantas, Jetstar, Virgin Blue, Air New Zealand, Pacific Blue and AirAsia X. Terminal 3 accommodates Tiger Airways Australia.

[edit] Airlines and Destinations

Passenger airlines operating in Gold Coast Airport
Airlines Destinations Terminal
Air New Zealand Auckland, Christchurch, Hamilton, Wellington 2
AirAsia X Kuala Lumpur 2
Norfolk Air Norfolk Island [begins October 2, 2008] [7] 2
Qantas (Domestic) Sydney [ends July 31, 2008 [8]]
  • Adelaide, Melbourne, Newcastle, Sydney
1
Qantas
  • Christchurch, Osaka-Kansai (Inbound) [begins October 1, 2008][9], Sydney (Outbound) [begins October 1, 2008], Tokyo-Narita [begins December 2008 [10]]
2
Tiger Airways Australia Melbourne 3
Virgin Blue Adelaide, Canberra, Melbourne, Newcastle, Sydney 2
Gold Coast Airport Apron
Gold Coast Airport Apron

[edit] Former Destinations

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Coolangatta Gold Coast - An airport with a golden future by Marco Finelli - Airliner World September 2005. (Airliner World online)

[edit] External links


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