London Airport
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
London Airport may refer to:
in London, England, United Kingdom (sorted by size):
- London Heathrow Airport (known as London Airport until 1966), used for commercial aviation
- London Gatwick Airport, in Crawley, West Sussex, used for commercial aviation
- London Stansted Airport, in Uttlesford, Essex, used for commercial and general aviation
- London Luton Airport, in Luton, Bedfordshire, used for commercial and business aviation
- London City Airport, used for commercial and business aviation
- London Biggin Hill Airport, used for business aviation
- London Southend Airport, in Southend-on-Sea, Essex, used for general aviation
- London Oxford Airport, in Oxford, Oxfordshire, used for general aviation
- London Ashford Airport, in Lydd, Kent, used for general aviation
- Closed:
- Croydon Airport 1920-1959
- Heston Airport 1929-1947
in Scotland, United Kingdom:
- Eday Airport, also known as London Airport, located near the Bay of London
in Canada:
- London International Airport, in London, Ontario
- London/Chapeskie Field Airport, in London, Ontario
in the United States:
- London-Corbin Airport, in London, Kentucky
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This disambiguation page lists articles about airports with the same or similar names. If an internal link referred you to this page, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended airport article, if one exists. |
London Gatwick Airport
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gatwick Airport (IATA: LGW, ICAO: EGKK) is London's second largest airport and the second busiest airport in the United Kingdom after Heathrow. It is the world's 22nd busiest airport in terms of passengers per year (7th in terms of international passengers). It is also often quoted as the world's busiest single runway airport, although strictly speaking it now has a second 'stand-by' runway, which can only be used when the main runway is out of use.
Gatwick is located in Crawley, West Sussex (originally Charlwood, Surrey) 5 km (3 miles) north of the town centre, 46 km (28 miles) south of London and 40 km (25 miles) north of Brighton.
Gatwick is owned and operated by BAA, which also owns and operates six other UK airports,[1] including Heathrow, and is itself owned by an international consortium led by the Spanish Ferrovial Group.[2]
With about 200 destinations the airport handled over 34 million passengers with 263,363 aircraft movements in 2006. It was confirmed that during 2007 Gatwick broke through the 35 million barrier for the first time in its history.[3]
Charter airlines generally do not operate from Heathrow and therefore use Gatwick as their main base for London and the South East.
For the past 30 years many flights to and from the USA have also used Gatwick because of the restrictions on access to Heathrow that were enshrined in the 1977 Bermuda II bilateral air services agreement between the UK and the US.
The airport is a major operational base for British Airways, easyJet and Virgin Atlantic. The airport is also a major base for a number of charter airlines including First Choice Airways, Thomas Cook Airlines, Thomsonfly and XL Airways. Runway 8L/26R is mostly used as a taxiway.
London Gatwick has a CAA Public Use Aerodrome Licence (Number P528) that allows flights for the public transport of passengers or for flying instruction.
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