Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of defunct or abandoned airports in the United States. This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (February 2012)
Some major Australian airlines served this airport, replaced by Lae Nadzab Airport: Rabaul old Airport: Rabaul: 1994 (destroyed) The airport was destroyed by the 1994 eruption that destroyed the town of Rabaul and subsequently a new airport was built and opened at Tokua, on the opposite side of the Rabaul caldera.
Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields is a website detailing information and first hand memories about airports in the United States which are no longer in operation, or are rarely used. The website was started by Paul Freeman in 1999 as he had developed an interest on the subject.
Pages in category "Defunct airports in the United States" The following 41 pages are in this category, out of 41 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. *
Only concourses A, B, and C existed then. A United Airlines Pilot Training Center was later built on the vacant land between the airport's west boundary and the housing tracts. Looking north, January 1966. Runway 35 became 35L, after 35R was built. The old United Airlines pilot training center buildings, on the airport proper, were still in ...
This is an alphabetical list of abandoned airports in Canada that were at one time important enough to warrant an article. Most of these also appear in Category:Defunct airports in Canada . This list is sorted by province or territory .
This airframe - SX-OAB - still remains as one of the four abandoned aircraft at the defunct airport to this day. Built in 1938, Ellinikon International Airport was originally called Kalamaki Airfield. Following the German invasion of Greece in 1941, Kalamaki Airfield was used as a Luftwaffe air base during the occupation. After World War II ...
Gila River Memorial Airport was a private-use airport owned and operated by the Gila River Indian Community, located 4 miles (3.5 nmi; 6.4 km) southwest of the central business district of Chandler, in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States. [1] It was used for cropdusting and air charter operations, with no scheduled commercial services. [2]