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Brampton-Caledon Airport (TC LID: CNC3) is a privately owned general aviation airport in Caledon, near Brampton, Ontario, Canada, northwest of Toronto. The club and airport was established in 1946 and occupies 240 acres (0.97 km 2 ) of land.
Location in Ontario As of May 2024, the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) contains seven airports, eight heliports, and one water aerodrome. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] These aviation facilities are situated within and around Toronto and its neighbouring cities, serving airline passengers, regional air travel and commercial cargo transportation.
This is an alphabetical list of all Nav Canada certified and registered water and land airports, aerodromes and heliports in the Provinces and territories of Canada. [1] [2] Airports names in italics are part of the National Airports System.
An example of this is the Elementary Flying Training School at De Winton, Alberta. It began as a transplanted RAF school run by RAF personnel. It opened on 18 June 1941 as No. 31 EFTS. On 13 July 1942 it was taken over by the Toronto Flying Club under contract to the RCAF. an expansion as a result of the Ottawa conference of May and June 1942
RAF Brampton was a non-flying Royal Air Force installation near Huntingdon in Cambridgeshire, England.Formerly the home of RAF Support Command, it also became the home of several elements of Defence Equipment & Support (DE&S), which itself was a result of a merger between the Defence Logistics Organisation (DLO) and the Defence Procurement Agency (DPA), and provided a base for the Defence ...
RAF Brampton Wyton Henlow is a former Royal Air Force unit covering three distinct sites in Cambridgeshire and Bedfordshire. The three sites, separately known as RAF Brampton , RAF Wyton and RAF Henlow , housed a number of flying training, intelligence, security and other RAF support organisations.
Malton is a neighbourhood in the northeastern part of the city of Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, located to the northwest of Toronto.. Malton is bounded by Highway 427 to the east, the Brampton city limits (a Canadian National Railway (CN) rail line) to the north, Airport Road to the west, and a second CN line and Toronto Pearson International Airport to the south.
The CAA Centre (formerly the Brampton Centre for Sports & Entertainment and the Powerade Centre) [1] is a 5,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Brampton, Ontario, Canada. It was built in 1998, and officially opened the same year on October 7.