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Halifax Stanfield International Airport (IATA: YHZ, ICAO: CYHZ) is a Canadian airport in Goffs, Nova Scotia, a rural community of the Halifax Regional Municipality. It serves the Halifax region, mainland Nova Scotia , and adjacent areas in the neighbouring Maritime provinces .
Another contributing factor was the pilots not choosing the easier approach for runway 23. [12] This was a longer runway perpendicular to runway 14. At the time of the accident, the first 1,767 feet (539 m) of runway 23 was closed for light and marking work. [13] The Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) the crew received stated "NOT AUTH" in reference to ...
Air Canada Flight 624 [1] [2] [3] was a scheduled Canadian domestic passenger flight from Toronto Pearson International Airport to Halifax Stanfield International Airport in Halifax, Nova Scotia. During heavy snow and poor visibility, at 00:43 ADT (03:43 UTC) on 29 March 2015, the Airbus A320-211 landed short of the runway and was severely ...
South Shore Regional Airport has one paved runway, which is 3,933 feet (1,199 m) long and 75 feet (23 m) wide. It is located at 80 Airport Road, Greenfield. Airport Road is located along Nova Scotia Route 210. [12] The airport is owned by the Region of Queens Municipality, and operated by the South Shore Flying Club, formed in 2015. [7]
The Halifax International Airport Authority (HIAA) is a Canadian airport authority charged with operating Halifax Stanfield International Airport on behalf of Transport Canada. The HIAA was established in November 1995 in advance of changes to the operation of Canadian airports by the federal government. [ 3 ]
The aircraft was loaded with a cargo of lawn tractors and made an intermediate stop at Halifax at 02:12 to be loaded up with approximately 53,000 kilograms (53 t; 117,000 lb) of lobster and fish. Flight 1602 taxied to Runway 24 (now assigned '23' designation), and the takeoff roll was commenced at 06:53:22.
Buildings in five cities are included in this list; Halifax, Moncton, Saint John, Fredericton, and St. John's, each having buildings at least 60 meters tall. The tallest of these high-rise buildings is One 77, which is 32 storeys and 111 m (364 ft) in height, which, when it topped out in 2023, supplanted the previous 52-year record-holder, The ...
The climbing flight path along the extended runway centerline which begins at takeoff and continues to at least 1/2 mile beyond the runway's departure end and not less than 300 feet below the traffic pattern altitude. The names of the legs are logical and based on the relative wind as seen looking down a runway facing into the wind.