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Boyne Mountain Airport (ICAO: KBFA, FAA LID: BFA) is a civil, public use airport located 1 mile west of Boyne Falls, Michigan. The airport is privately owned. The airport is privately owned. It is 4 miles away from Boyne City Municipal Airport .
KTUS (TUS) – Tucson International Airport – Tucson, Arizona; KTVC (TVC) – Cherry Capital Airport – Traverse City, Michigan; KTVF (TVF) – Thief River Falls Regional Airport – Thief River Falls, Minnesota; KTVL – Lake Tahoe Airport – South Lake Tahoe, California
This is a list of airports in Michigan (a U.S. state), grouped by type and sorted by location.It contains all public-use and military airports in the state. Some private-use and former airports may be included where notable, such as airports that were previously public-use, those with commercial enplanements recorded by the FAA, or airports assigned an IATA airport code.
For the 12-month period ending December 31, 2017, the airport had 25 aircraft operations per day, or just over 9,000 per year, all of which was general aviation. For the same time period, there were 15 aircraft based on the field: 13 airplanes – 12 single-engine and 1 multi-engine – and 2 helicopters .
The airport property ends at the intersection with C-48 west of Boyne Falls. M-75 runs parallel to the Boyne River until it turns west near the Boyne City Municipal Airport to enter the community of Boyne City on East Division Street. Two blocks further west, it meets C-73/East Jordan Road next to the Maple Lawn Cemetery. Next to the cemetery ...
Boyne Falls is a village in Charlevoix County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 358 at the 2020 census . The village is located within Boyne Valley Township .
Page Municipal Airport (IATA: PGA [2], ICAO: KPGA, FAA LID: PGA) is a public use airport 1 mile (0.87 nmi; 1.6 km) east of Page, in Coconino County, Arizona. [1] The airport has scheduled passenger service subsidized by the U.S. Federal Government's Essential Air Service program as well as regular sightseeing flights.
Airport entrance showing the former name Baggage-claim facility. The airport was built in 1941 as Higley Field.It was renamed Williams Field on February 24, 1942, in honor of Arizona native First Lieutenant Charles Linton Williams (1898–1927), who was killed while serving with the 19th Pursuit Squadron at Wheeler Field, Oahu, when he had to ditch his Boeing PW-9A, 26-353, in the Pacific ...