Burnie Airport Explained

Nativename:Wynyard Airport
Location:Wynyard, Tasmania
Pushpin Label:YWYY
R1-Surface:Asphalt
Metric-Rwy:y
Burnie Airport
Iata:BWT
Icao:YWYY
Type:Public
Owner-Oper:Burnie Airport Corporation
City-Served:Burnie, Tasmania
Elevation-F:62
Coordinates:-40.9989°N 145.7311°W
Pushpin Map:Tasmania
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Tasmania
Mapframe:yes
Website:www.burnieairport.com.au
R1-Number:09/27
R1-Length-M:1,650
R2-Number:05/23
R2-Length-M:827
R2-Surface:Asphalt
Stat-Year:2016/17
Stat1-Header:Passengers
Stat1-Data:59,861
Stat2-Header:Aircraft movements
Stat2-Data:3,929
Footnotes:Sources: Australian AIP and aerodrome chart,[1] passenger and aircraft movements from the DIRE

Burnie Airport, also called Burnie Wynyard Airport or Wynyard Airport, is a regional airport located adjacent to the town of Wynyard, about west of Burnie, Tasmania, Australia. Formally named the Wynyard Aerodrome, the first official opening occurred on 26 February 1934. The Burnie Airport is majority owned by the Burnie City Council.

Airlines and destinations

Rex Airlines operates services to and from Melbourne about 4 times per day using Saab 340 turboprop aircraft. Sharp Airlines offers flights to King Island and Launceston twice per day using a 19-seat Metro 23 (SA-227) turboprop aircraft. On 17 September 2021, QantasLink resumed direct seven weekly flights to Melbourne for the first time in 15 years with its 50-seat Q300 turboprop aircraft.

History of Burnie Airport

The first aerodrome at Wynyard was built by volunteers on an old racecourse. However, within a year of completion in 1932, the aerodrome was found to be too small for larger passenger and mail aircraft. A larger aerodrome was developed on the southern outskirts of the town and was officially opened on 26 February 1934.[2] [3] A further opening ceremony on 1 January 1935 was attended by the Prime Minister of the time, Joseph Lyons.[4]

In the mid-1970s, a Federal policy was adopted that would eventually see the ownership and maintenance of all airports outside of capital cities transferred from the Commonwealth to the respective local authorities.[2] [5] Under the new scheme, the future of the Wynyard Aerodrome was cast into doubt after Federal funding was secured for upgrading the Devonport Airport in August 1980; few if any areas of regional Australia had two major commuter and cargo airports only 60 km apart, which was the situation for Burnie/Wynyard and Devonport. After much political controversy, it wasn't until March 1985 that AU$5.2 million of funding was allocated by the State and Federal governments to upgrade the Wynyard aerodrome.[2]

The upgraded aerodrome was officially opened on 15 February 1987, incorporating a sealed runway 1650m long. Ownership had been transferred from the Commonwealth to the Burnie Port Authority and the Wynyard Aerodrome was renamed to Burnie Airport. The airport's IATA code (the three-letter code appearing on luggage tags etc) was changed from WNY to BWT.[2] [6]

The Burnie Airport Corporation Unit Trust acquired the Burnie Airport from the Burnie Port Corporation in 2001. The Trust is 51% owned by the Burnie City Council and 49% owned by a private sector partner, the Australian Airports Association.[7]

History of airlines and aircraft servicing Burnie Airport

As early as 1933, Tasmanian Aerial Services was landing at Wynyard as part of a route from Western Junction (now Launceston Airport) to Latrobe (Devonport Airport was yet to be built), Smithton and King Island.[8]

At-grade railway crossing

Until the early 2000s, Burnie was one of the few airports to have a railway line crossing an active runway, with the Western line from Burnie to Wiltshire crossing through the northern end of runway 05/23.[9] The railway line has not been in operation since 2003.[10]

Notable accidents and incidents

Statistics

Burnie Airport was ranked 55th in Australia for the total number of revenue passengers served in the financial year 2016-2017.[13]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. , Aeronautical Chart
  2. Book: Pink, Kerry . 2000 . Campsite to City - A History of Burnie . Burnie . . 115 . 0-646-40532-2.
  3. News: 27 February 1934 . Successful Air Pageant at Wynyard . The Advocate . Burnie, Tasmania . 30 March 2017.
  4. News: 31 December 1934 . Wynyard - Opening of Aerodrome . The Advocate . Burnie, Tasmania . 31 December 2016.
  5. Web site: Management of Aerodromes under the Local Ownership Plan . 17 August 1987 . profemery.info . S J Emery . 30 March 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160429095341/http://profemery.info/papers/ALOP1987.pdf . 29 April 2016 . dead .
  6. Web site: Air Transport . Rimon . Wendy . The Companion to Tasmanian History . University of Tasmania . 31 December 2016.
  7. Burnie City Council Annual Report 2015 - 2016 . Burnie City Council . 56 . 31 December 2016.
  8. Web site: Miss Flinders - A pioneering plane. live. The Local History Site. 22 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200315104102/https://www.julianburgess.com.au/single-post/2020/02/23/Miss-Flinders-a-pioneering-plane . 15 March 2020 .
  9. Web site: Wynyard Airport Rail Crossing.
  10. Web site: Archived copy . 13 May 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140513155404/http://www.tassteamalive.com/wyn.htm . 13 May 2014 .
  11. Web site: Cessna U206F, VH-PGJ, near Wynyard Tasmania, 13 April 1975 . 21 October 1975 . atsb.gov.au . Australian Transport Safety Bureau . 31 December 2016.
  12. Web site: Ditching involving a Piper Aircraft Corp PA-28R-180, VH-BOP, 2km NW Wynyard, Aerodrome, TAS on 27 January 1997 . 27 January 1997 . atsb.gov.au . Australian Transport Safety Bureau . 31 December 2016.
  13. Web site: Airport Traffic Data 1985–86 to 2016–17 . bitre.gov.au . Australian Government Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development . 3 October 2017.