- Barrow/Walney Island Airfield
Infobox Airport
name = Barrow/Walney Island Airfield
nativename =
nativename-a =
nativename-r =
image-width =
caption = Walney Airport viewed from the air
IATA = BWF
ICAO = EGNL
type = Private
owner =
operator = BAE Systems Marine Ltd - Submarines
city-served =
location =Barrow-in-Furness ,England
elevation-f = 173
elevation-m = 53
coordinates = Coord|54|07|44|N|003|16|03|W|type:airport|display=inline
website = [http://www.walneyairfield.multiservers.com/ www.walneyairfield]
metric-rwy = Y
r1-number = 17/35
r1-length-f = 3,327
r1-length-m = 1,014
r1-surface =Asphalt
r2-number = 12/30
Unlicensed
r2-length-f = 3,953
r2-length-m = 1,205
r2-surface = Asphalt
r3-number = 05/23
Unlicensed
r3-length-f = 3,438
r3-length-m = 1,048
r3-surface = Asphalt
stat-year =
stat1-header =
stat1-data =
stat2-header =
stat2-data =
footnotes = Source: UK AIP at NATSBarrow/Walney Island Airfield Airport codes|BWF|EGNL is located on
Walney Island , 1.5nautical mile s (2.8 km) northwest of the centre ofBarrow-in-Furness ,Cumbria ,England .It is owned by
BAE Systems , who operate private flights to various airfields across theUnited Kingdom . The Lakes Gliding Club also operates out of the airfield in favourable conditions [http://www.walneyairfield.multiservers.com/] .Barrow/Walney airfield was opened during
World War II , though the site had been used as an airship station since theFirst World War . It was left disused after WWII, and was sold on in 1959 toVickers , the company that owned Barrow shipyard at the time.Past
Commercial flights used the airport during the 1980s and 1990s.
Air Ecosse flew to Edinburgh, Carlisle and Liverpool from 1982 to 1983, beforeAir Furness took over in 1984, flying predominantly to Manchester. Operations ceased in 1988; despite a final attempt to run services from the airport in 1991-1992 byTelair , the airport is again currently used only for private flights.Future
In 2004 a study into the airfield revealed that a £1 million upgrade would attract thousands of business passengers a year flying to
London andEurope . The study found that the business demand from South Cumbria would be equal to 4,500 journeys in a year, reaching 7,900 by 2020. These are still only plans to convert Barrow/ Walney airfield into an International Airport, but already numbers ofaircraft using the airfield has increased with the completion of a recent upgrade programme. This work includesInstrument Landing System (ILS) installation for runway 35, Resurfacing of runway 17/35, Re-Lighting of runway 17/35, Security Fencing around the entire airfield and various other general improvements (newsignage etc). In 2005, anairshow was held at the site. Following its success, a second had been planned for 2007. However, its cancellation has since been announced [http://www.nwemail.co.uk/news/viewarticle.aspx?id=490447] .Aircraft
BAE operates flights to various
UK destinations during the week, using two Beechcraft King Air B200 aircraft. The Lakes Gliding Club operate at weekends when the weather conditions are favourable and various based light aircraft often fly throughout the week.Destinations
Below are the three regular destinations flown to by the BAE corporate shuttle:
*
England
**Warton (Warton Aerodrome )
**Bristol (Bristol Filton Airport )
**Farnborough (Farnborough Airfield )Alternate Names
* Barrow/ Walney Airfield
* Walney International (to Barrovians)
* Walney Airfield (to Barrovians)
* Walney Airport (to Barrovians)
* Barrow/ Walney Airport (to people unfamiliar to the area)
* Barrow Airport (to people unfamiliar to the area)References
* [http://www.walneyairfield.multiservers.com/ Barrow/Walney Island Airfield]
*United Kingdom AIPExternal links
* [http://www.walneyairfield.multiservers.com/ Barrow/Walney Island Airfield]
* [http://www.walneyairshow.co.uk/ Walney airshow]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.