Stornoway Airport Port-Adhair Steòrnabhagh | |||||||||||||||
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Runway 36 at Stornoway Airport | |||||||||||||||
| Summary | |||||||||||||||
| Airport type | Private | ||||||||||||||
| Operator | Highlands and Islands Airports Limited | ||||||||||||||
| Serves | Stornoway,Outer Hebrides | ||||||||||||||
| Location | Isle of Lewis | ||||||||||||||
| Elevation AMSL | 26 ft / 8 m | ||||||||||||||
| Coordinates | 58°12′56″N006°19′52″W /58.21556°N 6.33111°W /58.21556; -6.33111 | ||||||||||||||
| Website | Stornoway Airport | ||||||||||||||
| Map | |||||||||||||||
| Runways | |||||||||||||||
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| Statistics (2018) | |||||||||||||||
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Stornoway Airport[4] is an airfield on theOuter HebridesIsle of Lewis. It is about 2nautical miles (2.2 miles; 3.7 km) east ofStornoway, the biggest town on the island.
TheRoyal Air Force maintained an RAF airbase at the site of theairport until 1998.
Stornoway Airport is owned byHIAL, a company controlled by theScottish Government. The airfield was first opened in 1937, and used mainly for military purposes.NATO aircraft used the airport for missions over theNorth Atlantic and for stop overs toGreenland and theUnited States.
Nowadays the airfield is mainly used for domestic passenger services. TheRoyal Mail also operates a daily mail flight. CHC Helicopters operate twoSikorsky S-92helicopters, equipped for search and rescue on behalf of theCoastguard. The helicopter crews have flown on over 3,100 callouts since the establishment of the service in May 1987.[5] There are also several privately owned light aircraft based at the airport.
Stornoway Airport was also the location of an emergency landing made by an American Airlines Boeing twin-engined 767 jet, on its way from Sweden to Chicago in April 2001, due to a medical emergency on board. It stayed at the airport for 2 days.[source?]
Flights toAberdeen,Edinburgh,Glasgow,Inverness andBenbecula are regular.