- Kristiansand Airport, Kjevik
Infobox Airport
name = Kristiansand Airport, Kjevik
nativename =
nativename-a =
nativename-r =
image-width =
caption =
IATA = KRS
ICAO = ENCN
type = Public
owner =
operator =Avinor
city-served =
location = Kristiansand
elevation-f = 57
elevation-m = 17
coordinates = Coord|58|12|15|N|08|05|07|E|type:airport|display=inline,title
website =
metric-elev =
metric-rwy =
r1-number = 04/22
r1-length-f = 6,660
r1-length-m = 2,030
r1-surface =Asphalt
stat-year =
stat1-header =
stat1-data =
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footnotes =Kristiansand Airport, Kjevik airport codes|KRS|ENCN is situated northeast of the city
Kristiansand ,Vest-Agder in southernNorway , located 16 km from the city centre. The airport serves theAgder district with domestic and international flights. In 2006 the airport had 819,734 passengers. The airport is operated byAvinor . Travellers should make sure they avoid mixup with theKristiansund Airport, Kvernberget located in the middle part of Norway.The
Royal Norwegian Air Force has a training centre at the airport.History
In
1936 the city of Kristiansand decided to build an airport at Kongsgård, but later changed their minds and built it at Kjevik. The airport's construction started in 1938, and it was officially opened1 June 1939 , with a concrete runway of 1000 meter. In addition it had also a facility to landsea plane s. The first plane to land officially was aDC-2 fromKLM , flying fromOslo toAmsterdam .World War II
When the Germans attacked Norway on
9 April 1940 the airport had a small group of soldiers attached to it. After some light attacks from passing German planes and rumors of advancing German forces, the Norwegian forces retreated after trying to block the runway with barbed wire. That was not very successful and at 16:30 in the afternoon a GermanJunkers Ju 52 that had participated in the attack on the airport at Sola managed to land. The runway was expanded to 1500 meters. The airport was quickly reinforced and already on12 April it had 30 Messerschmitt Bf 109E stationed there. The notorious German SS leaderReinhard Heydrich who also was aLuftwaffe pilot was one also using the airport. During the rest of the war the airport played an important part in the German defence of occupied Norway. In June1945 the airport was recapured byRoyal Air Force andRoyal Norwegian Air Force troops in the 132 N Wing.Post War
In
1945 the Air Force moved its technical school to Kjevik. The same year the municipality gave the airport to the government, and has since been operated by Avinor. After the war Det Norske Luftfartsselskap started flying to Kristiansand withJunkers 52 sea planes. Later the airline moved its operations to Kjevik. Braathens S.A.F.E got a monopoly on flying to the airport in1955 from Oslo, to begin with usingDe Havilland Heron aircraft. The next year, in1956 the airline also started flying toStavanger and Bergen. Later the airline stated usingFokker F-27 ,Fokker F-28 ,Boeing 737 andFokker 50 aircraft.Scandinavian Airlines did not return with domestic flights until1998 when the new airport at Gardermoen open and allowed the airline to start flying to Oslo.In
1964 the runway was expanded to its present length; the land was acquired by the municipality while the actual construction costs were financed by the government. A few years later a new terminal was built.International routes
Before the war Det Norske Luftfartsselskap (DNL) operated a route between Kristiansand and
Copenhagen . After thesecond world war Braathens SAFE started flying to the Danish capital, but it only lasted two years. In 1953 DNLs successor Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) started operating a route to their hub a Copenhagen Airport, Kastrup, with a stop inAalborg . In 1970 Kristiansand got a direct route from Copenhagen. In 1973 the airline started operatingDouglas DC-9 jet aircraft on the route, though had problems filling them up and switched toFokker F27 s, then laterFokker 50 s operated bySAS Commuter Eurolink.When SAS Commuter closed down its Copenhagen route in 1994,
Maersk Air saw its chance and started flying to Copenhagen itself, using Fokker F50 aircraft with three daily departures. Later the airline switched toBoeing 737 and Canadair Regional Jets. Maersk Air also had a route to the earlier hub of Maersk Air,Billund (Denmark), for a short period (1.nov 2003-31.oct 2004). For a period the airline operated the aircraft onwards to London-Gatwick, thus giving a direct route to London from Kristiansand. But now the route has been taken over by SAS again, operated with Bombardier Q400 aircraft.KLM Royal Dutch Airlines started its route fromAmsterdam to Oslo via Kristiansand right after the war. The route was operated until 1971, when it changed to Oslo-Gothenburg-Amsterdam. The airline used among others Convair 440 Metropolitan,Vickers Viscount andLockheed L-188 Electra aircraft. In 1968 the airline was the first to operate scheduled jet aircraft,Douglas DC-9 s, to the airport. In 1999 the airline tried again, with three dailyKLM Cityhopper Fokker 50 direct flights to Amsterdam, but closed down after a year. But a few years later the airline started the route again, this time withFokker 70 aircraft.Between 1963 and 1981
Dan-Air of London operated a route between Newcastle and Kjevik. To begin with the airline usedAirspeed Ambassador s, later switching to Hawker Siddeley HS 748s,De Havilland Comet s andBAC One-Eleven s. The airline also operated a route from London-Gatwick to Kristiansand for some time.Starting in the fall of 1991, Widerøe Norsk Air flew on the route from its hub at
Sandefjord Airport, Torp via Kjevik toLondon Stansted Airport using Fokker 50 aircraft. But there was too much capacity between Norway and London at the time and the airline closed the route after about a year.Present
Today, the airport links Kristiansand with Southern Norway and the rest of Europe, with direct flights to
Bergen ,Kristiansund (via Bergen),Stavanger andOslo , in addition toAmsterdam ,Copenhagen ,Alicante ,Gothenburg .The airport is in dire need of an upgradefact|date=June 2008; the original 2000 m. runway has been shortened to 1840 metres, a new control tower (the airport currently operates video cameras to control the northern end of the runway)is needed, and a larger, two story terminal has been proposed.
However, airlines are opposing the building of jetways on Kjevik; the airport has the highest share of business flights in Norway as more than 50 % of flights are for business purposes, and airlines therefore want to use passenger boarding stairs to keep the aircraft on the ground for shorter times (utilising two points of boarding, instead of one).
New route proposals include a second airline flying to Oslo (if
Kredittilsynet continues to ban bonus points domestically), a route toTrondheim (the busiest route in Norway not directly connected), and flights toGermany .Accessibility
There is a bus service with
Kristiansand ,Lillesand ,Grimstad andArendal .Airlines and destinations
Domestic
*
Norwegian Air Shuttle (Oslo)
*Scandinavian Airline Systems (Bergen, Kristiansund, Oslo, Stavanger)International
*
KLM Royal Dutch Airlines
**operated byKLM Cityhopper (Amsterdam)
*Scandinavian Airline Systems (Alicante, Copenhagen)
**operated byCimber Air (Copenhagen)
*Welcome Air (Gothenburg, Hannover, Innsbruck, Graz)Charter
*
Eurocypria Airlines (Larnaca)
*Scandinavian Airline Systems (Chania)
*Spanair (Palma de Mallorca)External links
* [http://www.avinor.no/en/airport/kristiansand Kristiansand Airport, Kjevik]
* [http://www.kjevik.dk/ Extensive private site about the airport]
* [http://www.kjevikflyklubb.no/ Kjevik Flying Club]
*WAD|ENCN
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